Driver hits school group in Berlin; 1 dead, 9 badly hurt
The Hindu
Police said the driver was a 29-year-old German-Armenian who lived in Berlin
A man drove a car into a German school group in a popular Berlin shopping district Wednesday, killing a teacher and seriously injuring nine people, authorities said. He was quickly arrested.
The man drove into people on a street corner around 10:30 a.m., got the car back on the road and then crashed into a shop window about a block away, police said. The driver was apparently detained by passers-by and then arrested swiftly by a police officer near the scene.
Berlin's top security official, Iris Spranger, said the woman killed was a teacher on a trip to the German capital with students from a secondary school in the central German state of Hesse.
Authorities spent hours working to determine whether it was a deliberate attack or an accident. On Wednesday evening, Ms. Spranger made it clear on Twitter that authorities now believe it was the former, describing it an “amok act by a psychologically impaired person.”
Six people sustained life-threatening injuries and another three were seriously injured, fire service spokesman Adrian Wentzel. Police said 14 students from Hesse were among those who sustained injuries of varying severity, but didn't give a total tally.
American-British actor John Barrowman, who was in a nearby store at the time, described the scene as “carnage.”
Police said the driver was a 29-year-old German-Armenian who lived in Berlin. Ms. Spranger said posters were found in the man's car “in which he expressed views about Turkey." She said there was “no claim of responsibility.”
The 29th edition of the Conference of Parties (COP29), held at Baku in Azerbaijan, is arguably the most important of the United Nations’ climate conferences. It was supposed to conclude on November 22, after nearly 11 days of negotiations and the whole purpose was for the world to take a collective step forward in addressing rising carbon emissions.