Germany names Berlin attack suspect, offers €100,000 bounty.

German authorities on Wednesday named the suspect in the Christmas market truck attack as Anis Amri, and offered a reward of up to 100,000 Euros (104,000 dollars) for information leading to his arrest.

 

The 24-year-old Tunisian, who had three aliases and came to Germany in July 2015, is the subject of a Europe-wide manhunt as the main suspect in the attack, which killed 12 people and injured another 48.

 

He was described in official papers as 1.78 metres tall, weighing about 75 kilograms with black hair and brown eyes.

 

Amri was already under investigation in Germany on suspicion of planning a serious act of violence.

Berlin Attacks: Killer on the loose as arrested Pakistani has denied involvement.

The suspect in the Berlin lorry attack that killed 12 people and injured 48 others has denied any involvement, Germany’s interior minister said.

 

Berlin police chief Klaus Kandt later said he could not confirm the suspect in custody was the driver of the lorry.

 

The man being held is believed to have arrived in Germany from Pakistan at the end of last year.

 

He was captured in a park 2km away after reportedly fleeing the popular Christmas market in west Berlin.

 

Mrs Merkel has vowed to punish those responsible for the Berlin attack “as harshly as the law allows”.

Afghan refugee plows truck into shoppers in Berlin, kills 12 injures 48.

At least 12 people were killed and 48 injured after an Afghan refugee plowed a 25-tonne articulated lorry into a busy Christmas market in Berlin, capital of Germany on Tuesday.

The suspect turned off the lights of the vehicle and drove in a reckless manner.

The vehicle which was filled with steel cargo mounted the pavement at 7pm, before tearing through stalls and shoppers on Breitscheidplatz Square, outside the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church in the German capital’s main shopping area.

The man at the wheel, who according to German newspaper Berliner, used different aliases, was of Afghan heritage and had arrived in Germany in February, fled the scene but was later captured and arrested at a nearby zoo.

Police confirmed the original driver, who was transporting steel beams from Poland to Germany, was a Polish national who was found dead in the lorry’s cabin. It is believed that the suspect hijacked the vehicle.

The harrowing incident happened amid repeated warnings from security agencies that ISIS planned to wreak havoc on European countries during the festive season.

According to The Die Welt newspaper, German intelligence had been warning city authorities for the past week of a possible attack on a Christmas market.

Mike Fox, a British tourist, said the truck missed him by about three meters as it drove into the market, tearing through tables and wooden stands.

Fox said he helped people who appeared to have broken limbs, and said others were trapped under Christmas stands.

“We were in the market, outside the cathedral and we had just had mulled wine then as we were leaving the large truck came through,” he said.

“It went just past me, past my girlfriend. I think it missed me by three metres, missed her by five. It came in through the entrance, hit the sides of the barriers and then carried on past us.

“You do what you can to help who you can, really. It happened so fast that there was nothing we could do to stop it – if we’d tried to stop it we would have been crushed.”

Berlin Bomb Attack Plan Suspect Commits Suicide In Custody

A Syrian refugee suspected of planning a bomb attack “with Islamist motives” on a Berlin airport has strangled himself to death with his shirt in detention, Saxony state justice officials said Thursday.

Investigators believe that 22-year-old Albakr, who arrived in Germany last year, was close to staging a terrorist attack. German police have said that Albakr’s “approach and behavior” suggest an ISIS link.

“On the evening of October the 12th, 2016, Jaber Albakr, the prime suspect in planning a serious attack against the state, took his life in the prison hospital of the Leipzig correctional facility,” the ministry said in a statement on its website, also confirming the news to CNN.
The Saxony Justice Minister Sebastian Gemkow told reporters that Albakr had strangled himself with his shirt but it was not immediately clear if he had hanged himself in his cell.
Gemkow said Albakr had been seen by a psychologist earlier in the day, but it was assessed that suicide was unlikely.
Authorities then decided to reduce its checks on him from every 30 minutes to every 15.
Albakr was on a hunger strike and refused to drink, Gemkow said, adding that authorities tried to resuscitate him for about half an hour after they found his body.