A teenager believed to have radical Islamist links has been arrested for allegedly planning to drive a truck through a busy Christmas market in a bid to murder as many people as possible. Police in Elmshorn in Germany’s Schleswig-Holstein region arrested a 17-year-old Turkish-German national who they say was planning a truck attack at the city’s Christmas market.
Intelligence tips from the United States alerted the German authorities to the suspect in the spring of this year. After a Federal Criminal Police Office investigation, he was arrested on November 6. The description of the alleged plot matches the 2016 Christmas market attack in Berlin that Tunisian asylum seeker Anis Amri carried out. Amri drove a large truck through the German capital, killing a dozen people and injuring another 56.
Christmas markets across Europe have been targets of radical Islamic terrorists for years, with many now having to be guarded by armed police. Germany, specifically, has seen several Islamist terror attacks this year, including a mass stabbing at a diversity festival in Solingen over the summer, which left several dead.
As of September, Europe had seen at least 21 attempted terrorist attacks this year, many of which were linked to the Islamic State terrorist group.
The fatal stabbing of three children in Southport in the United Kingdom may also have been linked to radical Islam. Suspect Axel Muganwa Rudakubana, a migrant-background teenager, was said to have been in possession of jihadist terror manuals and attempted to create the deadly nerve agent ricin. However, police only revealed the possible connection months after the stabbing took place in July.