Far-right gunman kills 9 at German Shisha cafes

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Forensic experts work around a damaged car after a shooting in Hanau near Frankfurt, Germany, February 20, 2020. (Reuters)
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A car that was damaged in a shooting is covered in thermo foil is parked in front of a bar at the scene in Hanau, Germany. (dpa via AP)
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Updated 20 February 2020
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Far-right gunman kills 9 at German Shisha cafes

  • Federal counter-terror prosecutors said the shootings had 'signs of a xenophobic motive'
  • Among the dead were several victims of Kurdish origin

HANAU, GERMANY: A shooter with suspected far-right beliefs killed nine people at a shisha bar and a cafe in the German city of Hanau, police said Thursday, before apparently killing himself and his mother.
Federal counter-terror prosecutors announced they were investigating the case, which showed “signs of a xenophobic motive,” a spokesman told AFP.
Among the dead were “several victims of Kurdish origin,” the Kon-Med association of Kurds in Germany said in a statement, adding that it was “furious” that authorities were not doing more to combat rightwing extremism.

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Alarm has been growing about an increasingly emboldened far-right movement in Germany, following a deadly anti-Semitic attack in Halle and the murder of a pro-migrant politician last year.
The suspected gunman in Hanau was identified as 43-year-old German Tobias R.
He left behind online a “manifesto” and video material that suggested a terror attack motivated by “a hostile attitude to foreigners,” said Peter Beuth, the interior minister of the state of Hesse.




Tobias R left a “manifesto” and video material that suggested a terror attack motivated by “a hostile attitude to foreigners. (Social media)

The rampage started at around 10:00 p.m. on Wednesday at a shisha bar in the Heumarkt area of central Hanau, a city some 20 kilometers east of Frankfurt.

The gunman reportedly rang the doorbell and shot at people in the smoking section, killing five, including a woman, mass-market daily Bild said.
He then fled the scene by car before opening fire at the “Arena Bar & Cafe,” killing three people outside the building, local media said, with witnesses reporting hearing a dozen shots.
Police said one of those injured had also died, bringing the toll from the bar attacks to nine.
Another person who was injured remains in critical condition, Beuth told reporters.

“The victims are people we have known for years,” the Arena cafe manager’s son told German news agency DPA. “It is a shock for everyone.”
The bloodshed sparked an hours-long manhunt, with armed officers fanning out across the city and police helicopters roaming the night sky.
Hesse interior minister Beuth said witness reports helped track the suspect’s vehicle back to his home.
Special forces then stormed the suspect’s apartment, where they found him dead. They also found the body of his 72-year-old mother.
Both were killed by gunshots, Beuth said, in what appears to have been a murder-suicide though the police have yet to provide details.
In a rambling 24-page document seen by AFP, the alleged gunman wrote that people from over two dozen countries should be “destroyed.”
He also said he had never been with a woman, which he blamed on being “watched” by unspecified secret services.
King’s College London counter-terrorism expert Peter Neumann tweeted of the text that it contained “various, but mostly extreme right views, with a do-it-yourself ideology cobbled together out of parts found on the Internet.”
“The pattern is clear, and not at all new,” he added.
Neumann described the suspect as “an incel,” short for someone who is “involuntarily celibate” and often used in connection with online groups of sexually frustrated men.
Several “incels” have been linked to violent attacks, including a man in Toronto who stands accused of killing 10 people by plowing a van into pedestrians in 2018.


Over 1,400 Indonesians left Cambodian scam groups in five days: embassy

Updated 37 min 52 sec ago
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Over 1,400 Indonesians left Cambodian scam groups in five days: embassy

  • Scammers working from hubs across Southeast Asia lure Internet users globally into fake romances and cryptocurrency investments
  • Some foreign nationals have evacuated suspected scam compounds across Cambodia this month

PHNOM PENH: More than 1,400 Indonesians have left cyberscam networks in Cambodia in the last five days, Jakarta said on Wednesday, after Phnom Penh pledged a fresh crackdown on the illicit trade.
Scammers working from hubs across Southeast Asia, some willingly and others trafficked, lure Internet users globally into fake romances and cryptocurrency investments, netting tens of billions of dollars each year.
Some foreign nationals have evacuated suspected scam compounds across Cambodia this month as the government pledged to “eliminate” problems related to the online fraud industry, which the United Nations says employs at least 100,000 people in Cambodia alone.
Between January 16-20, 1,440 Indonesians left sites operated by online scam syndicates around Cambodia and went to the Indonesian embassy in Phnom Penh for help, the mission said in a statement.
The “largest wave of arrivals” occurred on Monday when 520 Indonesians came to the embassy, it said.
Recent Cambodian law enforcement measures against scam operators meant more citizens would likely continue showing up at the embassy, it added.
“The main problem for them is that they do not possess passports and they are staying in Cambodia without valid immigration permits,” according to the embassy.
It urged Indonesians leaving scam sites to report to the embassy, which could assist them with securing travel documents and overstay fine waivers in order to return home.
Indonesia said this week that its embassy in Phnom Penh handled more than 5,000 consular service cases for citizens in Cambodia last year — more than 80 percent of which were related to Indonesians who “admitted to being involved with online scam syndicates.”
Cambodia arrested and deported Chinese-born tycoon Chen Zhi, accused of running Internet scam operations from Cambodia, to China this month.
Chen, a former adviser to Cambodia’s leaders, was indicted by US authorities in October.
Analysts say Chen’s extradition has left some of those running Internet scams from Cambodia fearing legal consequences — after the criminal enterprises ballooned for years — with some operators opting to release people or evacuate their compounds.