Germany shooting: chants of 'Nazis out' at vigils after gunman kills nine
Thousands of people
have taken part in vigils across Germany after a gunman with apparent far-right
beliefs killed nine people at a shisha bar and a cafe in the city of Hanau.
The suspect, a
43-year-old German identified as Tobias Rathjen, was found dead at his home
after the rampage along with his 72-year-old mother in what appeared to be a
murder-suicide.
Hundreds of people,
many carrying candles or a white rose, gathered in silence in Hanau in the
evening to show solidarity with the victims.
Large crowds also
gathered in Frankfurt and at Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate, some carrying signs
that read “Take racism personally” or “Never again!”, in scenes replicated
across dozens of German cities.
The nine people killed
at the two bars late Wednesday evening were aged between 21 and 44 and all had
a “migrant background,” although some were German citizens, chief federal
prosecutor Peter Frank said.
He added that evidence,
including video footage and a “manifesto” found on the suspect’s website,
showed Rathjen had “a very deeply racist attitude”.
Frank said
investigators were trying to determine if the suspect had accomplices, or contacts
in Germany or abroad who might have known about plans for the attack.
Chancellor Angela
Merkel condemned the “poison” of racism, as anger mixed with grief over the
deadliest attack linked to Germany’s extreme right in recent months.
Relatives and friends
of the victims gathered at the Arena bar on Thursday, an AFP reporter said,
tearfully embracing one another.
“I couldn’t be any more
upset,” said Inge Bank, 82, who lives near the bar. “We have to nip it in the
bud if the Nazi party is coming back.
Mourners place candles
and flowers at the Unity Memorial at St Paul’s church in Frankfurt am Main.
German president
Frank-Walter Steinmeier placed a wreath of white flowers outside the Arena bar
on Thursday evening before addressing the main Hanau vigil.
Steinmeier, who serves
as a moral compass for the nation, condemned the shooter’s “brutal act of
terror”. But he said he was heartened to see “thousands, maybe even tens of
thousands” turning out across the country to honour the victims.
“We stand together, we
want to live together and we show that over and over again. That is the
strongest way to fight hatred,” he said, to the occasional shout of “Nazis
out!” from the crowd.
Elsewhere, Frankfurt’s
Eintracht football team held a minute’s silence ahead of its Europa League
match against RB Salzburg.
As condemnation of the
Hanau attack poured in, the co-leader of the far-right AfD party Joerg Meuthen
stood out by saying the shootings were “neither right- nor left-wing terrorism”
but the actions of “a madman”.
Politicians from across
the political spectrum however accused the anti-Islam, anti-immigrant AfD of
normalising hate speech and fomenting anti-foreigner sentiment in recent years.
German police have
identified around 60 far-right adherents as “dangerous” individuals capable of
carrying out a violent attack.
On Friday last week,
they arrested 12 members of a German extreme right group believed to have been
plotting “shocking” large-scale attacks on mosques, similar to the ones carried
out in Christchurch in New Zealand last year.