Two dead, several hurt as car hits crowd in German city: police
A driver struck a crowd in southwest Germany on Monday, killing two people and seriously hurting several more, authorities said, adding that a 40-year-old German suspect was arrested at the scene.
Armed police shut down and evacuated the inner city of Mannheim after a car was driven through a pedestrian shopping area, with authorities saying they were working to determine the "perpetrator's motivation".
Two car ramming attacks in other German cities since December have killed eight people, while Mannheim was the scene of a stabbing attack at an anti-Islam rally last May that killed a policeman and wounded five other people.
Security was a major theme in last month's general election, which was won by the centre-right CDU/CSU under Friedrich Merz.
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.
The driver on Monday ploughed through a pedestrian area where a carnival market was located with dozens of food stalls, rides and games.
"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, was quoted as telling 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," another shopkeeper was quoted as saying by the local daily Mannheimer Morgen.
Police spokesman Stefan Wilhelm said residents had been urged "to avoid the inner city area" amid the major police operation.
Officers with heavy weapons cordoned off the area and police helicopters were seen in the air.
The Bild daily said 25 people were injured in the incident, with pictures showing multiple ambulances in the area 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, readying for a wave of casualties needing emergency treatment.
German cities have seen several violent attacks in recent months, including stabbing sprees and car ramming attacks.
Last month a man drove a car into a trade union rally in the southern city of Munich, killing a two-year-old girl and her mother. Police arrested a 24-year-old Afghan suspect.
In December a car-ramming attack targeted a Christmas market in the eastern city of Magdeburg, killing six people and wounding hundreds. Police arrested a Saudi man at the scene.
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.
Faeser cancelled her visit to the Rose Monday parade in Cologne to travel to Mannheim.
Amid the spate of attacks in Germany, which fuelled support for the far-right AfD, Merz pledged a "zero tolerance" law and order drive.
Merz's party is now in talks with the Social Democrats of outgoing Chancellor Olaf Scholz to form a new coalition government.
bur/fz/jsk/jm
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


American Military News
an hour ago
- American Military News
‘Have a nice day, DJT!': Trump's breakup with Musk devolves into a war of insults
President Donald Trump's friendship and political alliance with Elon Musk, the world's richest man, who fueled Trump's campaign with record amounts of cash before working at the White House by his side until last week, appears to be over, with both men leveling searing criticism against one another in a sharp public row. Musk had been criticizing the Trump administration over its signature legislation, the 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act,' for its projected impact on the national debt throughout last week. But his calls to 'kill the bill' on Wednesday prompted Trump, speaking to media from the Oval Office, to respond in kind. 'Elon and I had a great relationship, I don't know if we will anymore,' Trump said Thursday. 'And he hasn't said bad things about me personally, but I'm sure that'll be next. But I'm very disappointed in Elon.' Musk, responding on his social media platform, X, took credit for Trump's election victory. The billionaire entrepreneur, whose companies also include SpaceX and Tesla, contributed over $280 million to Trump and other Republicans during the 2024 presidential campaign. 'Without me, Trump would have lost the election, Dems would control the House and the Republicans would be 51-49 in the Senate,' Musk wrote. 'Such ingratitude.' Matters only deteriorated as the day progressed. After meeting with the German chancellor, Trump wrote on social media that the 'easiest way' to save billions in federal spending would be to 'terminate Elon's government subsidies and contracts.' 'Make my day,' Musk shot back, before claiming in a subsequent post that Trump had withheld the full release of FBI files on Jeffrey Epstein, the late child sex offender, because they would implicate the president himself. 'Time to drop the really big bomb: Trump is in the Epstein files,' Musk wrote. 'That is the real reason they have not been made public. Have a nice day, DJT!' The exchange broke open a feud that had been simmering for weeks out of public view. In private, Musk had relayed concerns over the bill to the president, while expressing disagreement with several other policies, including the establishment of an artificial intelligence campus in the Middle East and Trump's announcement of global tariffs. 'I agree with much of what the administration does, but we have differences of opinion,' Musk said in a more muted tone last week, speaking in an interview with CBS. 'You know, there are things that I don't entirely agree with. But it's difficult for me to bring that up in an interview because then it creates a bone of contention,' he added. 'So then, I'm a little stuck in a bind, where I'm like, well, I don't wanna, you know, speak up against the administration, but I also don't wanna take responsibility for everything this administration's doing.' In the Oval Office, Trump said he believed that Musk had turned on him after he rejected Musk's recommendation for the head of NASA, a position that could benefit SpaceX, Musk's spaceship company. He also said that Musk opposed provisions of Trump's megabill that would phase out tax credits for electric vehicles. 'Elon knew the inner workings of this bill better than almost anybody sitting here. Better than you people. He knew everything about it — he had no problem with it. All of a sudden he had a problem, and he only developed the problem when he found out that we're going to have to cut the EV mandate, because that's billions and billions of dollars,' Trump said. 'People leave my administration and they love us, and at some point, they miss it so badly, and some of them embrace it, and some of them actually become hostile,' Trump added. 'I don't know what it is.' But Musk denied he had been shown the bill, responding on X that he wouldn't mind if the EV provisions remain in the text so long as others, which he said would balloon annual deficits, are cut. 'This bill was never shown to me even once and was passed in the dead of night so fast that almost no one in Congress could even read it!' Musk wrote. 'Keep the EV/solar incentive cuts in the bill, even though no oil & gas subsidies are touched (very unfair!!), but ditch the MOUNTAIN of DISGUSTING PORK in the bill.' The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office released an assessment on Wednesday estimating that the 'big, beautiful bill,' which has passed the House and is under consideration in the Senate, would add $2.4 trillion to the national debt over the next decade, and result in 10.9 million Americans losing health insurance coverage over the same period. At the beginning of the administration, Trump put Musk in charge of the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, a White House program that intended on cutting federal spending and reducing the deficit. Musk's tenure in the role, designated as a special government employee, ended last week. On X, Musk posted a collection of past remarks from Trump warning against growing deficits and congressional actions increasing the debt ceiling, adding, 'where is this guy today?' 'Either you get a big and ugly bill or a slim and beautiful bill,' Musk added. 'Slim and beautiful is the way.' ___ © 2025 Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Colorado pol who refused to condemn Boulder firebombing shows true colors at council meeting: critics
An anti-Israel official in Boulder, CO, refused to condemn as antisemitic the horrific firebombing of Jews at a peaceful demonstration — then 'doubled down' by wrapping herself in the colors of the Palestinian flag, critics said. Taishya Adams took office shortly after Hamas' Oct 7, 2023 massacre of 1,200 Israelis. Adams, 50, was seen as 'egging on antisemitism,' an insider told The Post, long before Egyptian national Mohamed Sabry Soliman unleashed a flamethrower and Molotov cocktails last week on unsuspecting members of the group Run 4 Our Lives. 3 Taishya Adams was the sole member of the Boulder City Council who would not sign a letter condemning the June 1 attack. Boulder City Council The group holds a weekly walk calling for Hamas to release the remaining Israeli hostages. Soliman, 45, faces 118 criminal counts for the June 1 incident which left 15 people, as well as a dog, seriously hurt. When city officials offered a 'letter of solidarity' this week condemning the hate crime — Adams was the sole councilmember who refused to sign. She then turned up at the live-streamed Thursday council meeting in a bright red blazer with a large green scarf wrapped around her neck. 'She's doubling down,' seethed the insider. 3 Adams has long been seen as 'egging on antisemitism,' an insider told The Post. LinkedIn/Taishya Adams 'It's disgusting,' seethed Run for Our Lives member Aaron Brooks of the pro-Palestinian fashion statment. 'It's grossly insensitive.' Local Rabbi Marc Soloway slammed Adams in a withering speech Wednesday in front of Gov. Jared Polis. 'In this moment when we're reeling, just days after someone tried to burn Jews to death, that the city council could not unanimously denounce this as an act of antisemitism is horrifying,' he told The Post. City council member Mark Wallach ripped Adams — who is liaison to Boulder's Palestinian 'sister city' of Nablus and returned from a self-funded official trip last month – during the meeting. 'You may find that act courageous — but I find it inexplicable and virtually inexcusable,' blasted Wallach, addressing Adams directly. 'Where is your sense of grace and mercy?' The flummoxed Adams stumbled through a word salad response, pointing to her statement about yanking her support for the solidarity letter, and claimed she looked forward to 'continued dialogue,' noting this is 'not time for the head, but for the heart.' 3 Adams wrapped herself in the colors of the Palestinian flag just days after the antisemitic firebombing in Boulder, Colorado. erika8213 – Adams' ongoing 'anti-Israel propaganda' has included posting about anti-Israel demonstrations on the anniversary of the Oct. 7 attack and ripping the City Council last year for having 'blood on our hands' for failing to pass a ceasefire resolution against Israel. Omer Shachar, co-leader of the walk, called the attack 'pure antisemitism' and recalled seeing an octogenarian friend aflame. 'When I think about Sunday, I see her,' he said, noting she was 'on fire — top to bottom, from legs to the hair.' He can't shake the imagery of friends with 'skin just peeled off.' 'It's beyond words.'
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Survey: Germany's Merz gaining in popularity as leader
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has risen markedly in popularity in his first weeks in the job, according to a new poll published on Saturday. The survey, conducted by the INSA research institute for the Bild newspaper, found that 36% of the 1,202 respondents were so far satisfied with the performance of the 69-year-old conservative chancellor, who took office on May 6. This is 13 percentage points higher than his rating four weeks ago. Another 45% of respondents said they were dissatisfied with Merz, 4 percentage points less than in the last survey, while 19% did not know how to answer. Germany's coalition government under Merz is also viewed more positively than it was a month ago. Some 37% said they were satisfied with the partnership of his Christian Democrats (CDU) and their Bavarian sister party the Christian Social Union (CSU) with the Social Democrats (SPD), up from 29% in the last survey. Again, 45% expressed dissatisfaction, and 18% did not know how to answer. On a weekly basis, however, there was hardly any movement in the ratings of the five parties represented in Germany's lower house of parliament, or Bundestag. The CDU/CSU bloc gained one percentage point from the previous week to reach 27% support, followed by the far-right Alternative for Germany with 23%, one percentage point down from the previous week. The SPD (16%) and the Left Party (10%) both lost one percentage point, coming in at 16% and 10% respectively, while the Greens gained one point to garner 11% support. Public opinion polls are fraught with uncertainty. Among other things, declining party loyalty and increasingly short-term election decisions make it hard for pollsters to accurately assess the data collected. Generally, surveys only reflect opinion at the time they are conducted and are not forecasts of possible election outcomes.