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THE suspect who rammed a crowd in Munich, injuring at least 28 people including children, was a failed asylum seeker who posted Islamist social media content before the attack, reports claim.

A 24-year-old Afghan man is said to have "sped up" in a Mini Cooper before ploughing into around 1,500 Verdi demonstrators - a Berlin-based German trade union - in the Bavarian capital.

Shirtless man being arrested by police.
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Footage appears to show the driver being arrested
Police officers arresting a person on the ground.
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The apparent moment cops overpower the man allegedly driving the MiniCredit: X
Members of the emergengy services work at the scene where a car drove into a crowd in the southern German city of Munich on February 13, 2025 leaving several people injured, police said. Munich police said on social media platform X that "several people were injured" after "a car drove into a group of people" in the centre of the Bavarian state capital. (Photo by Michaela STACHE / AFP) (Photo by MICHAELA STACHE/AFP via Getty Images)
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At least 28 people have been injured, including children, after a Mini Cooper drove into a crowd in Munich
An injured person is taken away by emergency services at the scene of an accident after a driver hit a group of people in Munich, Germany, Thursday Feb. 13, 2025. (Michael Fischer/dpa via AP)
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An injured person is taken away by emergency services
Map of Munich showing the location of a car attack.

Police said the suspect is an asylum seeker from Afghanistan who, the region's interior minister added, was known to cops in relation to drug and theft incidents.

News website say the suspect is a Kabul-born man named Farhad N, born in 2001.

He is alleged to have posted Islamist content on social media before the heinous incident.

Farhad N arrived in Germany as an asylum seeker in December 2016 as an "unaccompanied minor" and was taken into the care of a youth welfare facility, having previously been in Italy, German Press Agency reports.

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He applied for asylum which was rejected in 2017 and tried to appeal it - without success.

Farhad N was later granted what's called a toleration permit, which means his deportation was suspended, Spiegel claims, but he has been required to leave the country since autumn of 2020.

Extremism and terror cops are probing the Munich car plough after the Minister-President of Bavaria, Markus Söder, labelled the shocking incident a "suspected attack".

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said that the suspect cannot hope for leniency and must leave the country.

He also spoke more widely about immigration in Germany.

Scholz said: "It is very important for me to get the message across that anyone who commits crimes in Germany will not only be severely punished and sent to prison, they must also expect that they will not be able to continue their stay in Germany."

He explained that this is "why" he got the government "to resume and carry out repatriations to Afghanistan, despite the lack of diplomatic relations".

Debris and a stroller scattered on the ground near a car and firetruck.
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A pram captured laying on the floor at the sceneCredit: AP
Paramedics transporting a patient on a stretcher.
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An injured person is transported on a stretcher by members of the emergency services
First responders and police at the scene of an incident with debris scattered on the ground.
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Emotional pictures show shoes, umbrellas and bags discarded on the floorCredit: AP

The Chancellor added: "We have already organised such a flight with criminals.

"We are also in the process of doing this in other cases. And not just once, but on an ongoing basis.

"This perpetrator cannot count on any leniency, he must be punished and he must leave the country."

The shocking smash comes just before the Munich Security Conference starts on Friday, with US Vice President JD Vance and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky arriving later today.

Terrified witnesses said they heard gunshots at the scene, and Munich cops have since confirmed a shot was fired "during the arrest".

At least two people are said to be "very seriously injured" and a two-year-old has been critically injured,  reports.

Munich police spokesman, Christian Huber, has revealed key moments leading up to the suspected attack.

A police vehicle was travelling at the rear of the Verdi trade union rally before a "vehicle approached and came up" behind it.

He said the car "then moved to overtake" the police vehicle and "accelerated" before smashing into the back of the rally.

The horror smash is not thought to be connected with the Conference that begins this weekend.

As the Mini ploughed into the crowd, pedestrians desperately bolted for cover in shops and residential buildings that line either side of the street, according to witnesses.

Scattered belongings on a wet street after an accident.
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Members of the emergency services work at the scene where a car drove into a crowdCredit: AFP
Police tape at the scene of a car crash that injured multiple people.
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A view of the scene after a car ploughed into a crowd in the southern German city of MunichCredit: Getty
Police cars at the scene of an accident.
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A police car attends the scene of an accident after a driver hit the group of peopleCredit: AP

Munich's mayor Dieter Reiter spoke out soon after the shocking incident occurred and confirmed that children are among those injured.

He told Bild: "The police chief has just informed me that a vehicle drove into a group of people and unfortunately many people were injured, including children.

"I am deeply shocked. My thoughts are with the injured."

Unconfirmed reports from eyewitnesses in the horror incident claim there were two men involved in the crowd plough, with one of them shot by police and carried away, according to .

Munich cops have repeated that the driver was arrested but said they're unable to confirm reports that another person was involved.

Emotional pictures show shoes, umbrellas and bags discarded on the floor after victims presumably ran for their lives.

Other harrowing image shows a collapsed pram on the ground.

One eyewitness on the scene said the Mini hit a woman and child, explaining that they were "apparently lying under the car".

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Around 10:30am Munich time the driver is said to have accelerated before ploughing into demonstrators.

On Thursday, some city employees went on strike to demonstrate for an eight per cent pay increase as well as higher bonuses and three additional days off.

Public organisations like those running sports centres, hospitals, daycare centres, and street cleaners all took part in the strike action.

The Munich Verdi managing director Claudia Weber who was waiting for the group to make their way to Königsplatz, a seven minute walk from where the incident took place, spoke on behalf of Verdi.

She told Bild: "It's all so unbelievable. We are totally shocked and are incredibly afraid for our colleagues who were part of the demonstration.

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"We heard that the car drove straight into the demonstration on purpose.

"Hopefully there will be no deaths."

Recent German terror attacks

THE terrifying Munich incident comes after the country has seen a wave of recent attacks.

In late January a two-year-old boy and a man were killed in a stabbing in Aschaffenburg, also in Bavaria.

This attack is thought to have been carried out by another Afghan asylum seeker whose application to stay in the country had been rejected.

In December, 2024, six people were killed and over 200 injured when a car rammed into a crowded Christmas market in Magdeburg sparking far-right protests.

On Thursday as the incident in Munich unfolded, an Afghan man named Sulaiman A went on trial in Stuttgart for a knife attack on May 31, 2024 in Mannheim.

The suspect with suspected jihadist motives is accused of launching the attack that killed a policeman and injured five others at an anti-Islam rally.

Bavaria's Prime Minister Markus Söder used this most recent incident and the wave of other attacks to call for change in the country.

The 58-year-old said: "It is suspected that this was an attack.

"The attack shows that something has to change in Germany - and quickly!

"An event in Aschaffenburg in January and now in ...It's simply enough."

Germany's approach to asylum seekers and security is facing huge scrutiny as the issues come to a head before the national election on February 23.

Police car at a city intersection with a police officer directing traffic.
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A large-scale police operation began this morningCredit: AP
High-angle view of police officers apprehending a suspect near parked cars and tram tracks.
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Footage appeared to show cops running towards the sceneCredit: X
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