By Riham Alkousaa
BAD AROLSEN, Germany (Reuters) – German investigators are trying to make sense of “confused” statements from a 29-year-old man who rammed his car into a group of schoolchildren and killed a teacher in Berlin, the city’s mayor, Franziska Giffey, said on Thursday.
The authorities have established that the German-Armenian man was severely mentally ill but had yet to understand any motive for the Wednesday incident, or any possible connection to posters about Turkey found in the back of his car, she said.
Families were in mourning for the teacher who was killed while taking schoolchildren on a trip to the German capital from the small town of Bad Arolsen, in the state of Hessen.
A police spokesperson said 29 people were injured, including some of the students.
The incident took place in a busy shopping district near the site of a fatal attack in 2016, when a truck rammed into a crowded Christmas market.
Investigators, with the help of a translator, were trying to establish more of the “at times confused statements he was making”, Giffey told RBB inforadio, describing a “dark day in the history of Berlin”.
Germany’s Bild newspaper said the man had lived with his mother and a sister, who described her brother as having “serious problems”.
Residents of Bad Arolsen were in shock over an incident that brought back memories of an attack in the Hesse town of Volkmarsen, when a man rammed his car into a carnival parade in 2020.
“It brings back lots of pictures from Volkmarsen,” Ellen Schreck, 45, whose son went to the school the group was from. She described the situation as an “absolute horror”.
“It’s usually a quiet little town … you always think you’re in a safe bubble here. But that’s not the case anymore.”
People laid flowers and candles at the Kaulbach school, which was closed on Thursday. Parents and a team from the school have travelled to Berlin to help look after the children.
“We’re all deeply saddened,” said Almut Will-Olivieri, who owns a pizzeria in front of the school.
“The town is simply in shock.”
(Writing by Matthias Williams; Editing by Robert Birsel)