German driver targets 'foreigners' in New Year’s Day car attack

A 50-year-old German has been arrested after he made several attempts to mow down foreigners in the country's west, injuring at least four pedestrians.

Police walk behind barrier tape on Berlin Square after a man had driven his car into a group of pedestrians and injured at least four.

Police walk behind barrier tape on Berlin Square after a man had driven his car into a group of pedestrians and injured at least four. Source: DPA

A 50-year-old German man clearly intended to kill foreigners when he rammed his silver Mercedes into a crowd of people in the early hours of New Year's Day, injuring four, a senior government official says.

Police said the man, who was not named, made racist comments when he was stopped and arrested in the nearby city of Essen after fleeing the scene of the attack in the northwestern German town of Bottrop.

Police walk behind barrier tape on Berlin Square after a man had driven his car into a group of pedestrians and injured at least four.
Police walk behind barrier tape on Berlin Square after a man had driven his car into a group of pedestrians and injured at least four. Source: DPA

"A German man deliberately drove into crowds of people ... that were largely made up of foreigners. There was a clear intention by this man to kill foreigners," Herbert Reul, interior minister of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, where Bottrop is located, told reporters on Tuesday.

Earlier, police and prosecutors said they suspected the attack, which took place at a crowded plaza, was deliberate and "linked to the xenophobic views of the driver".

A police car stands behind barrier tape on Berlin Square after the incident.
A police car stands behind barrier tape on Berlin Square after the incident. Source: DPA

They said there was also preliminary information that the man was mentally ill but he had no prior police record.

A police spokeswoman said Syrian and Afghan citizens were among those injured, but gave no further details. She said one of the four people injured remained in hospital.

Earlier the driver had steered his car at another pedestrian, who escaped unharmed, Reul said.

He also targeted people at a bus stop after fleeing the scene of the Bottrop attack, but they were not injured, police said.

Horst Seehofer, Germany's federal interior minister, told Bild newspaper the Bottrop case would be carefully investigated, along with an incident that occurred in Bavaria on Saturday in which four asylum-seekers were arrested on suspicion of attacking a dozen people.

"It is a matter of political credibility to pursue both cases decisively and aggressively," he told the paper.


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Source: AAP



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