Web Stories Monday, December 23

SORROW AND ANGER

Surveillance video of the attack showed a black BMW driving at high speed straight through a dense crowd, running over or scattering bodies amid the festive stalls selling snacks, handicrafts and traditional mulled wine.

Police said the vehicle drove “at least 400m across the Christmas market”.

The sorrow and anger sparked by the carnage, in which a young child was among those killed, seemed set to inflame a heated debate on immigration.

The leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), Alice Weidel, which has focused on jihadist attacks in its campaign against immigrants, wrote on X: “When will this madness stop?”

“What happened today affects a lot of people. It affects us a lot,” Fael Kelion, a 27-year-old Cameroonian living in the city, told AFP.

“I think that since (the suspect) is a foreigner, the population will be unhappy, less welcoming,” he said.

Michael Raarig, 67, an engineer, expressed his sorrow at the site, telling AFP that “I am sad, I am shocked. I never would have believed this could happen, here in an east German provincial town”.

He believed that the attack “will play into the hands of the AfD” which has had its strongest support in the formerly communist eastern Germany.

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