Friday, October 30, 2015

German police chief warns of security threat from thousands of migrants entering Europe

German police chief warns of security threat from thousands of migrants entering Europe

GERMANY is facing an unprecedented threat to its domestic security because of the unrelenting stream of migrants entering the country, a police chief has warned.


Stock image of German police arresting a man
GETTY
The German police chief warned attacks are on the rise

Up to a million refugees and economic migrants are expected in Germany this year, while more than 8,000 streamed over the Austrian border to the southern province of Bavaria on Wednesday alone.
And German security bosses are warning of outbreaks of violence and disorder on the streets as a result.

Officials are openly worrying about a potential rise in right-wing radicalism amongst Germans.
Head of the Federal Criminal Police Office in Germany Holger Muench said: "The security situation is getting worse with the growing numbers of refugees."
The security situation is getting worse with the growing numbers of refugees
German police chief
Desperate asylum seekers are increasingly clashing over limited resources, with alarming reports of mass brawls and knife attacks by newly arrived migrants in Germany.

A German police officer speaks with migrants waiting to cross the Austrian-German border
GETTY

A German police officer speaks with migrants waiting to cross the Austrian-German border
Mr Muench added: "Conflicts among asylum-seekers are increasing, the mood among the right is being stirred. This dynamic worries me."

The police chief said the number of offences against asylum seekers' shelters had tripled so far this year to 600, of which at least 543 had a right-wing background.

That compares to 198 for the whole of last year.

Ninety-five violent crimes and 49 arson attacks are under investigation by German police.
Authorities are examining a further 10 cases of refugees suspected of taking part in war crimes abroad or for being a member of a terrorist organisation.

In one case, Berlin police arrested a 32-year-old man suspected of abducting a migrant boy, aged four, after a child's body was found in his car.

German police standing guard at a train station
GETTY
German police standing guard at a train station

Mohamed Januzi disappeared on October 1 while waiting with his mother and two siblings outside the offices of the government programme for social care.

Police had released video footage showing the alleged abductor walking hand-in-hand with Mohamed away from the offices.
Refugees walk along a platform after their arrival with a special train from Austria to the main train station in Passau, Germany
EPA
Refugees walk along a platform after their arrival from Austria to Passau in Germany
Police spokesman Thomas Neuendorf said officials were waiting for the results of an autopsy to confirm the child's identity as well as the circumstances around his death, including when he may have died.

Initial evidence shows there is no indication that the suspect and the child knew each other, he said.
Daily Bild reported that Mohamed's family came to Germany from Bosnia.

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