A damaged car is seen as police secure the area near the site of a car-ramming attack in Mannheim, Germany that killed two people. Photo / AFP
A damaged car is seen as police secure the area near the site of a car-ramming attack in Mannheim, Germany that killed two people. Photo / AFP
A car driven into a crowd in Mannheim, Germany, killed two people and injured several.
Police arrested a 40-year-old German man, describing him as a suspected ‘perpetrator’.
The incident follows recent violent attacks in Germany, including car rammings and stabbings.
A car driven into a crowd in southwest Germany on Monday killed two people, authorities said, adding they had arrested a 40-year-old German man after the incident.
“Two people died from their injuries and several others are seriously injured,” Baden-Wuerttemberg state’s Interior Minister Thomas Strobl said in a statement.
Armed police shut down the inner city of Mannheim where a damaged Ford passenger vehicle sat near a pedestrian shopping arcade with the front windscreen smashed.
The incident “is a stark reminder to us: we must do everything we can to prevent such crimes... Germany must become a safe country again,” Merz wrote on X.
Police did not call the latest incident an attack but said a suspected “perpetrator” had been arrested after the car was driven through a downtown shopping area around 12.15pm (12.15am NZDT).
“A car drove into a group of people in Mannheim’s city centre. Two people died and several others are seriously injured,” Baden-Wuerttemberg state’s Interior Minister Thomas Strobl said.
Strobl added that the suspect arrested at the scene was a 40-year-old German man from the neighbouring state of Rhineland-Palatinate.
“The police are working hard to clarify what happened, the background to the crime and the perpetrator’s motivation,” Strobl added.
“It’s heartbreaking,” cafe owner Kasim Timur, 57, told news site Der Spiegel, adding that one of his staff members had seen seriously injured people, among them children.
“We only see wounded people and the dead person, and we don’t know what to do,” a shopkeeper said. .
Wilhelm said residents had been urged “to avoid the inner city area” amid the major police operation.
Police secure the area near the site of an attack in Mannheim that killed two people and left dozens injured. Photo / AFP
Officers with heavy weapons cordoned off the area and police helicopters were seen in the air.
The Bild daily said two people were killed and 25 injured in the incident, with pictures showing ambulances near the city’s landmark water tower.
A reporter at the scene for news channel NTV said that “at least one person is lying covered under a tarpaulin” and that children’s shoes were among the clothes and debris scattered on the ground.
Spate of attacks
The intensive care unit of Mannheim’s university hospital declared a disaster alert.
German cities have seen several violent attacks in recent months, including stabbing sprees and car-ramming attacks blamed on asylum seekers.
Last month, a man drove a car into a trade union demonstration in Munich, killing a 2-year-old girl and her mother. Police arrested a 24-year-old Afghan suspect.
Mannheim itself was the scene of a stabbing attack at an anti-Islam rally in May in which a policeman was killed and five others wounded, with a Syrian man now on trial over the attack.
Authorities were on high alert as Monday is the high point of traditional German carnival celebrations before the beginning of Lent.
Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said before the incident in Mannheim that festivities were taking place “with high security precautions”.
Mannheim had seen thousands take to the streets on Sunday for its own carnival parade.