Munich shooting: 10 killed in shopping centre attack

Police say at least 10 people, including one of the possible suspect, were killed in a shooting attack on Munich shopping centre.

Shooting in shopping centre in Munich

A man suspected of carrying out a deadly shooting attack in the German city of Munich killed himself, and likely acted with a small group af three, police have said. The other two attackers are still missing (*to date it seems have been established instead that the boy was operating alone).

At least 10 people, including one of the possible suspect, were killed in Friday’s attack at the Olympia shopping centre, a police spokesman said early on Saturday 23/7.

Shooting in shopping centre in Munich

A body found about 1km from the scene was that of one of the shooters. The search for the other accomplices continues.

Earlier on Friday 22/7, police had said they were looking for up to three suspects, citing eyewitness accounts. A massive police operation was launched in the Bavarian capital following the attack, with authorities telling residents to stay indoors. Special forces hunting for suspects were deployed in the streets, while bus, tram and metro services were also suspended.

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The Bavarian capital had been placed under a state of emergency. “The city is in a complete state of lockdown”.

There was no information about the possible motive of the attack, in which at least 20 people were wounded and 10 killed.

Shootout in Munich

In a statement on Facebook, Munich police said reports came in shortly before 6pm local time (19:00 GMT) about a shooting incident near Hanauer Street, which then progressed to Ries Street and the Olympia shopping centre.

The police statement added that witnesses had reported three different shooters with semi-automatic weapons.

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Authorities asked that no photographs or videos of police operations to be posted online. German Chancellor Angela Merkel was being regularly briefed on the attack, Peter Altmaier, her chief of staff, said. “All that we know and can say right now is that it was a cruel and inhumane attack,” he said on German public channel ARD. “The motives for this abhorrent act have not yet been completely clarified,” German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said in an emailed statement. “We still have contradictory clues.”

While the German police, therefore, does not attribute any Islamic connection to the attack in Munich of Bavaria, the CNN cites the testimony of a woman who said she was at the McDonald’s where the attack occurred. The woman reported she heard the shots and saw a man “killing children who were there to eat.” She added that the gunman shouted “Allahu Akbar”.

“The perpetrator was an 18-year-old German-Iranian from Munich,” police chief Hubertus Andrae told reporters. The Iranian origins of the assailant, thus, exclude direct connections with the Caliphate.

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Germany’s interior minister Thomas de Maiziere cut short his holiday in the United States to go back to the capital, Berlin, late on Friday to meet with security officials.

In the US, President Barack Obama pledged to provide Germany with whatever help it might need to investigate the shooting.

GERMANY-SHOOTING-MALL

A wide area around the busy shopping centre was closed off as special forces rushed to the scene. “The police was just flying by – another car about every 15 or 30 seconds,” Ryan Sink, who was passing by the shopping centre, said. “No one really knew what was going on,” Sink told Al Jazeera. “We were all pulling over frantically and watching them set up a perimeter … Police were telling people passing by to get out of the way and away from the buildings.”

In response to the attack, Facebook activated its safety feature , allowing Munich residents and visitors to let their friends know they were unharmed.

Source: Al-Jazeera

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