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TERRORISM

German police shoot dead man armed with knives

German police on Tuesday said they had shot dead a man suspected of attacking passers-by with knives in the western town of Moers, days after a deadly knife attack in nearby Solingen.

German police shoot dead man armed with knives
A masked special police officer stands next to a vehicle of the German Red Cross on August 24, 2024 near the scene where at least three people were killed and several injured when a man attacked them with a knife on late August 23, 2024 in Solingen, western Germany. Photo by INA FASSBENDER / AFP

Emergency services were called at around 2:45 pm on Tuesday and told that a man had “assaulted and threatened several passers-by” in the town, police in nearby Duisburg said in a statement.

Officers were able to locate a 26-year-old German suspect who “attacked (them) with two knives in his hands”, the police said.

Police shot at the man who was “fatally injured as a result” but no other people were injured, they said.

The incident comes with Germany on high alert after three people were killed and eight injured in Friday’s knife rampage at a street festival in Solingen, about 45 kilometres (28 miles) from Moers.

A 26-year-old Syrian with suspected links to the Islamic State group is alleged to have carried out the attack.

Paying tribute to the victims on Monday, Chancellor Olaf Scholz pledged to tighten up Germany’s weapons laws, “in particular with regard to the use of knives”.

Stronger weapons controls would come “very quickly”, Scholz said.

The attack in Solingen has reignited a debate over immigration in the country and put extra pressure on Scholz ahead of key regional elections set for Sunday.

The suspected attacker was meant to have been deported to Bulgaria, where he had first arrived in the European Union, but appears to have easily evaded attempts to remove him.

Scholz on Monday said Germany would “do everything we can to ensure that those who cannot and must not stay here in Germany are repatriated and deported”.

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TERRORISM

Germany to tighten law on deporting foreigners who glorify terror acts

The German government on Wednesday agreed measures making it easier to deport foreigners who glorify acts of terror after a surge in online hate posts during the Gaza war.

Germany to tighten law on deporting foreigners who glorify terror acts

Under the new rules, foreigners could face deportation for social media comments that glorify or condone a single terrorist act, according to a draft law agreed by the cabinet.

At the moment, it is necessary to express support for several acts.

After Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel, which triggered the Gaza war, there was a surge in hate posts on social media in Germany with officials saying Islamists in particular were responsible.

The fatal stabbing last month of a police officer by an Afghan asylum seeker in Mannheim also triggered a surge of such posts, fuelling the debate on deportations.

“It is very clear to us that Islamist agitators who are mentally living in the Stone Age have no place in our country,” Interior Minister Nancy Faeser told the Funke media group, ahead of Wednesday’s cabinet meeting.

“Anyone who does not have a German passport and glorifies terrorist acts here must — wherever possible — be expelled”.

Glorifying acts of terror online fuels a climate of violence that can encourage extremists and violent criminals, according to the draft law, which still needs to be passed by parliament.

Convictions have already been made over some social media posts. An imam in Munich was this month fined 4,500 euros ($4,800) for posting on Facebook that “everyone has their own way of celebrating the month of October”, on the day of the Hamas attack.

In parliament following the Mannheim attack, Chancellor Olaf Scholz also called for those who celebrate acts of terror to face deportation.

Glorifying terrorist offences amounted to a “slap in the face for the victims, their families and our democratic order”, he said.

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