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  Syrian blows himself up in Germany

Syrian blows himself up in Germany

AFP
Published : Jul 26, 2016, 6:43 am IST
Updated : Jul 26, 2016, 6:43 am IST

ISIS says bomber one of its ‘soldiers’.

Special police officers arrive at the scene after an explosion occurred in Ansbach, Germany, on Monday.  -AP
 Special police officers arrive at the scene after an explosion occurred in Ansbach, Germany, on Monday. -AP

ISIS says bomber one of its ‘soldiers’.

A Syrian asylum-seeker who blew himself up outside a German music festival had made a video pledging allegiance to ISIS, in the second attack claimed by the jihadists in Germany in a week.

The 27-year-old assailant wounded 15 people, four of them seriously, near a cafe in the southern city of Ansbach on Sunday night when he set off a bomb in his rucksack, killing himself.

“A video made by the assailant was found on his mobile phone in which he threatened an attack,” Bavarian state interior minister Joachim Herrmann told reporters.

“After that he announced in the name of Allah that he pledged allegiance to (ISIS chief) Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the well-known Islamist leader, and announced an act of revenge against Germans because they were standing in the way of Islam.”

ISIS later said via the jihadist-linked Amaq news agency that the attacker “was a soldier of the Islamic State” who had acted “in response to calls to target nations in the coalition fighting” the extremists.

Europe’s economic powerhouse was already reeling after nine people were killed in a shopping centre shooting spree in Munich on Friday and five people were wounded in an axe attack on a train in Wuerzburg on July 18. ISIS also claimed the axe rampage.

All three brutal incidents were in Bavaria, the southern state which has been a gateway for tens of thousands of refugees under Chancellor Angela Merkel’s liberal asylum policy. Ms Merkel’s deputy spokeswoman Ulrike Demmer expressed the government’s “shock” after the rash of attacks but also warned against branding all refugees a security threat.

“Most of the terrorists who carried out attacks in recent months in Europe were not refugees,” she told reporters. “The terrorism threat (among refugees) is not larger or smaller than in the population at large.”

The police said the Syrian man intended to target the open-air festival but was turned away as he did not have a ticket, and detonated the device outside a nearby cafe.

The explosion went off in the centre of the city of Ansbach, not far from where more than 2,500 people had gathered for the concert, at around 2000 GMT.

The attacker, who came to Germany two years ago but had his asylum claim rejected after a year, had tried to kill himself twice in the past and had spent time in a psychiatric clinic, authorities said.