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Munich attack suspect had 'religious' motive, prosecutor says

Prosecutors have said the suspect, 24-year-old Afghan national Farhad N, is being investigated on suspicion of 36 counts of attempted murder - and said his motives were believed to be religious.

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Moment suspected attacker is arrested
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Police in Germany have said the suspect in a car ramming attack in Munich appears to have had a "religious motivation".

At least 36 people were hurt on Thursday when a car drove into a crowd of workers taking part in a union demonstration in the city. One child suffered serious injuries.

A 24-year-old Afghan national, Farhad N, was arrested at the scene after officers fired a shot at the vehicle.

At a news conference on Friday, prosecutor Gabriele Tilmann said the suspect admitted that he "deliberately drove into the participants of the demonstration".

In questioning, he "gave an explanation that I would summarise as religious motivation," she said, adding the suspect shouted "Allahu Akbar", or "God is great", to police and then prayed after his arrest.

"I'm very cautious about making hasty judgements, but based on everything we know at the moment, I would venture to speak of an Islamist motivation for the crime," she added.

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Police update on the incident

She clarified that the authorities had no reason to believe that the perpetrator was affiliated with any Islamist or terrorist organisations and that they had not found any evidence of him having accomplices.

She said they were now looking through his devices to see "whether other people knew about the attack before it happened, or if he was part of a network" - but added they had not found any evidence of this so far.

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Scenes after the incident

Demonstrators were walking along a street when the car overtook a police vehicle that was accompanying the group, according to officers in the German city.

They said the car then sped up and ploughed into the back of the group.

Police said two of the 36 people were "very seriously hurt" in what they now say is being treated as a murder attempt, while eight more were seriously hurt.

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The incident happened shortly before world leaders including US vice president JD Vance and Ukrainian President Volodymyr ZelenAG百家乐在线官网y arrived in the southern city for the Munich Security Conference this weekend.

Police have said the incident is not thought to be related to the conference.

Officials say Farhad N has lived in Munich since he arrived as an unaccompanied minor seeking asylum in 2016, and has no previous convictions.

The man's asylum application was rejected, but he had not been forced to leave due to security concerns in Afghanistan and he was in Germany legally with a work permit.

Police investigate a car which hit a crowd in Munich. Pic: Reuters
Image: Police investigate a car which hit a crowd in Munich. Pic: Reuters
The car is lifted onto a tow truck.
Pic: AP
Image: The car which drove into the crowd is lifted onto a tow truck. Pic: AP

Prosecutors say he is now under investigation on 36 counts of attempted murder as well as bodily harm and dangerous interference with road traffic.

Security and immigration have been in sharp focus in Germany ahead of a federal election next week and following a string of violent attacks, with the far-right party AfD party doing well in polls.

Two months ago, a Saudi doctor was accused of driving his car into a crowd at a Christmas market in Magdeburg, killing six and injuring hundreds.

On Thursday, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz described the Munich incident as a "terrible attack" and said the perpetrator "must be punished and he must leave the country".