TassoMoorნუ შეიძლება მართლები ხართ არვიცი და ჯობდა დაეპანიკებინათ ხალხი.
ამაზე დავა მიჭირს.
=====================================================================
ინგლისური ვინც უკეთ იცის
Munich shooting spree: police rule out extremismGuy Chazan in Berlin and Claire Jones and James Shotter in Munich
Police said the young man who shot dead nine people near a shopping centre in Munich on Friday evening before turning the gun on himself had a fascination with mass shooting sprees and no apparent links to Islamic State.
Thomas Steinkraus-Koch, a senior prosecutor, said the 18-year-old German-Iranian, who was born and grew up in Munich, was a "classic mass shooter" who had no political motive. He said he had been receiving psychiatric treatment for depression.
During a search of the Munich apartment he shared with his parents, investigators had found a book entitled "Amok in the Head: Why Schoolchildren Kill" as well as a number of articles about gun rampages. There were no leads connecting him to Isis. Information on the man's computer had been secured and was being analysed.
Hubertus Andrä, Munich's chief of police, said the man had acted alone and had "no connection to the theme of refugees". He had with him an illegal Glock 9mm pistol, whose serial number had been removed, and more than 300 rounds of ammunition in his rucksack that he did not fire.
Police said they were trying to verify whether the killer hacked a Facebook page and used it to entice people to the McDonald’s, where the attack began, by saying cheap products were being sold there.
The attack spread panic throughout one of Germany's largest cities. Munich was in lockdown for much of Friday evening as public transport was suspended, the city's central station closed and highways blocked.
Police said 27 people were injured in the attack, 10 of them seriously. Eight of the nine people killed were aged between 14 and 20.
Chancellor Angela Merkel was due to meet her chief of staff Peter Altmaier, Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière and intelligence officials on Saturday to discuss the incident. A key focus of the investigation will be how the man acquired his pistol in a country whose gun laws are notoriously strict.
There will be widespread relief in political circles that the shooter appeared not to have any political or religious motive. Security officials have long warned that jihadist terrorists might be slipping into Germany under cover of the massive refugee influx the country has seen over the past two years, and say that Germany is just as vulnerable to militant attack as France or Belgium. There are also fears local Islamist networks might be trying to recruit migrants from the Middle East who have no prior connection to religious extremism.
Asked whether the man had any links to Anders Breivik, the Norwegian far-right terrorist who killed 77 people in an attack in 2011, Mr Andrä said: "if he occupied himself with amok attacks, then from my point of view he almost necessarily had to deal with Breivik," noting that Friday night's incident had occurred on the anniversary of Breivik's rampage in Norway, and that the ages of the victims were similar.
The alarm was first raised at 17:47 on Friday evening after he started shooting indiscriminately at passers-by outside a McDonald's fast-food restaurant before moving towards Munich's Olympia shopping centre. He was later found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound in a side street near the mall. It was initially believed that as many as three attackers were involved, but police later said the man had acted alone.
It was Europe's third big act of violence against civilians in eight days. On July 14, a Tunisian drove a truck into crowds celebrating Bastille Day in the southern French resort of Nice, killing 84. And on Monday evening, a 17-year-old Afghan refugee armed with an axe and a knife went on the rampage on a train near the Bavarian town of Würzburg, injuring five people. A video of the attacker, who was shot dead by police, showed him vowing to kill "infidels" and brandishing a knife.
German TV reported that the Munich shooter’s parents moved to Germany from Iran during the 1990s. Neighbours in the area of Maxvorstadt where he lived, described him as "quiet".
Ali Sedik, who lived in a neighbouring street to the one where police carried out their search, said that when he was shocked when he heard the news. “I saw him again and again delivering newspapers, and thought ‘how hard-working’. And then all of a sudden this happens. How is it possible?”
Stefan Baumanns, who works in a shop next to the attacker's apartment building, said: “He was never with friends and only alone. He was a shy guy. He used to say 'Hi', but that was it.”
Mr Baumanns added: “Last night I saw a picture of my store and thought 'what the f....'s going on?’” On the news they had a picture of 69. That's my number. Then I saw the video [of him] on top of the parking lot and I recognised him immediately. He always had a strange way of walking. It was not sporty or dynamic.”
Another neighbour said: “There was no problem with the family. They were very quiet. I knew the father from the garage. I didn't know the mother. I'm not sure if she lived here.”
Munich gradually returned to normal on Saturday, as public transport resumed and people came back out on to the streets. But the crime scene around the Olympia shopping mall remained fenced off.
Mr Baumanns expressed doubts about how the city would recover.
"Munich always seemed such a safe place. Now there's a question about whether we can secure the Oktoberfest if a shy 18 year old can get a weapon and do this."
He added: "My question is the same as everybody else's — did he act alone?"
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/fc1971de-50b1-11...bef.html#slide0 This post has been edited by Kaifistka on 23 Jul 2016, 19:57