Germany Mass Stabbing Assailant Turns Himself in, Confesses

German police car

The assailant of a mass stabbing in the city of Solingen, Germany, turned himself in and confessed his crime a day later. Credit: Dickelbers, CC BY SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons

The perpetrator who killed three and injured eight in a mass stabbing on Friday evening at a music festival in Solingern, Germany, has turned himself in, it was reported on Sunday.

Authorities have since identified him as a 26-year-old Syrian refugee.

“The suspect turned himself in and admitted to the crime,” Duesseldorf police and prosecutors said in a joint statement.

Solingen anniversary festival ends in tragedy

The mass stabbing took place at a local festival celebrating 650 years of the German city of Solingen and its cultural diversity, when an assailant turned against members of the crowd and stabbed them in the neck at Fronhof, a marketplace in the center of the city, in front of one of the festival stages set up for live music.

The man had fled the scene and remained at large for almost 24 hours while the city was put into lockdown as police searched for the perpetrator.

In that meantime, ISIS claimed responsibility for the attack and branded the hiding assailant as “a soldier of the Islamic State,” but the claim was yet to be verified by authorities on Sunday.

The three victims who died at the scene were two men, aged 67 and 56, and a 56-year-old woman. Eight other persons were injured in the mass stabbing, four of them critically.

Stabbing assailant hiding in yard during manhunt

The suspect was reportedly still covered in blood from the attack when he approached police officers at around 9 p.m. local time Saturday, telling them “I’m the one you’re looking for.”

He had been allegedly hiding in a yard while police forces had been looking for him.

Another two arrests were made on Saturday in relation to the attack and one refugee center raided by police as the manhunt for the assailant continued.

The Minister of Interior of North Rhine-Westphalia, Herbert Reul, on Sunday confimed to German TV that the attacker of the stabbing rampage was eventually in police custody.

According to German news magazine Der Spiegel, the suspect had entered Germany in 2022 and applied for asylum in Bielefeld. He was reportedly decided to be deported to Bulgaria in summer 2023, but he went into hiding until his transfer order expired and was then granted protection in Germany.

The magazine reports that the suspect was not known to the authorities as an extremist

Per Deutsche Welle, the German Federal Police have taken over the investigation as they are trying to establish whether the suspect had indeed links to the Islamic State.

The suspect was due to appear before the Federal Court of Justice in Karlsruhe on Sunday.



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