A 41-year-old Syrian national has been apprehended following a series of violent incidents on Saturday evening. Local authorities in Essen, Germany, report that the man used a machete and a van to carry out attacks across the city, which resulted in injuries to 31 people, including several children. The condition of some of the injured, especially the children, remains critical.
The chaos commenced around 5:10 PM when the assailant, who was pictured carrying a Palestinian flag, set fire to a residential building at the intersection of Altenessener Strasse and Pielsticker Strasse. Following this, another building on Zollvereinstrasse was also set alight. Residents made desperate efforts to rescue individuals trapped in the burning structures, with some onlookers capturing poignant images of parents handing their children to rescuers. Official reports from the police indicated 29 injuries caused by the fires, while the fire department counted 31 total injuries.
After starting the fires, the attacker drove his van to Katernberger Strasse, where he rammed it into a greengrocer’s shop twice. Exiting the vehicle, he then threatened passers-by with a machete. People in the vicinity attempted to defend themselves by throwing objects at the assailant.
A Syrian man clad in a keffiyeh around his head, and a Palestinian flag scarf on his shoulder, armed with a machete, has injured 31 people including 2 children in Essen, Germany. pic.twitter.com/58A426xRkL
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) September 29, 2024
Police were quickly called to the scene and found the man in a shed near the greengrocer’s shop. He was cornered and, following a tense standoff during which officers warned him to lie down, subdued without further violence.
ESTRANGED WIFE WAS TARGET?
“This was all the work of a man who may not have been able to cope with the separation from his ex-wife. Many people were seriously injured, and apparently, he didn’t care about the damage his actions caused,” said CDU Interior Minister Herbert Reul of North Rhine-Westphalia following the attacks.
The National Pulse reported in August that one in 10 Syrians now live in Germany, with nearly half taking state welfare assistance.