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German police foil Berlin half-marathon attacks

Police officers stand in front of the building where lived the driver of the vehicle which ploughed into an open-air restaurant, killing two people a day earlier in Muenster, western Germany on April 8, 2018. (Photo by AFP)

German police have detained four men, one of whom they suspect of planning knife attacks at Sunday's Berlin half-marathon, the newspaper Die Welt reported in its online edition.

Die Welt said the four suspects were linked to Anis Amri, a Tunisian man with extremist militant ties who killed 12 people in an attack in Berlin in December 2016 when he hijacked a truck and drove it into a crowded marketplace.

Berlin police were not immediately available for comment.

In its unsourced report Die Welt said the main suspect was known to Amri and had planned to stab to death spectators and runners at the half marathon.

The suspect had in his possession two knives which had been especially sharpened for this purpose, the report said.

Amri's attack in Berlin in 2016 had prompted German lawmakers to call for tougher security measures. No major extremist militant attack has been carried out in Germany since.

Earlier on Sunday, Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said the government would do everything possible to protect citizens, but added: "We have again experienced that ... absolute security is unfortunately not possible."

Seehofer was speaking in Muenster, where a man drove a camper van into a group of people sitting outside a restaurant on Saturday, killing two of them before shooting himself dead.

Authorities have said the attacker was a 48-year-old German citizen with mental health problems and that there was no indication of an extremist militant connection.

(Source: Reuters)


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