Suspect in Germany Christmas market attack is ‘atheist’ Saudi refugee

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Taleb Jawad al-Abdulmohsen is accused of ploughing through a crowded Christmas market in Germany, killing five people.

Taleb Jawad al-Abdulmohsen is accused of ploughing through a crowded Christmas market in Germany, killing five people.

PHOTO: AFP

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RIYADH – The suspected perpetrator of

a deadly attack at a Christmas market

in the German city of Magdeburg on Dec 20 is a 50-year-old Saudi refugee from a Shi’ite family who declared himself an atheist and “anti-Islam”.

Taleb Jawad al-Abdulmohsen has been living in Germany since 2006 and practised as a psychiatrist in the town of Bernburg, near Magdeburg. He has no known links to Islamist extremists.

Abdulmohsen

was arrested in the car used for the attack,

and is suspected of deliberately ploughing into the crowd of Christmas revellers in northern Germany on the night of Dec 20, killing five and injuring more than 200.

The ramming came eight years to the day after a similar attack on a Christmas market in Berlin that killed 13 people.

The authorities in Germany said the date was not a coincidence, although they have not said it was an Islamist attack.

On social media, Abdulmohsen portrayed himself as a victim of persecution who renounced Islam and decried what he said was the Islamisation of Germany.

He came from a Shi’ite family in the village of Hofuf in the predominantly Shi’ite province of al-Ahsa, in the east of Saudi Arabia.

He arrived in Germany in 2006 and was granted refugee status 10 years later, according to German media and a Saudi activist.

Abdulmohsen lived and worked in the region of Saxony-Anhalt, whose capital Magdeburg is 130km west of Berlin.

A ‘pariah’

In an interview with the German newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau several years ago, he said he had been threatened with death for apostasy.

In an unpublished interview with Agence France-Presse from 2022 for an unrelated story, Abdulmohsen presented himself as “a Saudi atheist”, and said young Saudis were not only fleeing the government but “are fleeing Islam”.

“Strict Islamic upbringing is the cause of all the problems of Muslims, especially women,” he said.

The entrance to the home of the suspect in Bernburg, eastern Germany.

PHOTO: AFP

Some media outlets have reported links between Abdulmohsen and the far-right in Germany. He was well-known in the Saudi diaspora in Germany and helped asylum seekers, particularly women.

“He is a psychologically disturbed person with an exaggerated sense of self-importance,” Mr Taha Al-Hajji, legal director of the Berlin-based European Saudi Organisation for Human Rights, told AFP.

“This is definitely not an Islamist-motivated attack,” he added.

Mr Hajji said Abdulmohsen was “a pariah” among the Saudi community in Germany, despite his work with asylum seekers.

Last August, he posted on social media: “Is there a path to justice in Germany without blowing up a German embassy or randomly slaughtering German citizens? I have been seeking a peaceful path since January 2019 and have not found it. If anyone knows it, please let me know.”

In the post, he condemned what he called “the crimes committed by Germany against Saudi refugees and the obstruction of justice, no matter how much evidence was presented to them”. AFP

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