When the suspect, 50-year-old Saudi doctor Taleb A., drove through the market in an act that killed several people and injured scores more, the Western world was immediately cast back to December 2016, when Tunisian man Anis Amri ploughed a truck through a Berlin Christmas market in a deadly attack for which Islamic State later boasted credit.
Taleb A. arrived in Germany in 2006 and was recognised as a refugee in 2016. He is also reportedly a supporter of Germany's far-right, anti-immigration party, AfD. But unlike the "lone wolf" terrorists, Taleb A. has a public, online profile as a virulent seculariser, damning Islamic fundamentalists and Western multi-culturalists with equal venom.
The confounding picture of Taleb A. makes his aims while behind the wheel on Friday night all the more muddy, perhaps too much to even establish the conventional terrorism tag.
Whatever its perverse motivation, the Magdeburg atrocity won't be just a Christmas horror story.
Far more than an attack on a church, which would be aimed at Europe's small active Christian minority, striking a Christmas market hits at broader secular society enjoying its mid-winter festivities as a whole.
Even before Friday, the friction arising from Syria's domestic revolution with rising fears in Europe about terrorism as an outgrowth of mass migration from the Middle East was sharp.
Denne historien er fra December 22, 2024-utgaven av The Independent.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra December 22, 2024-utgaven av The Independent.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Usyk outpoints Fury again to retain heavyweight titles
Oleksandr Usyk beat Tyson Fury on points on Saturday to do the double over the Briton, retaining the unified heavyweight titles in the process.
Jesus punishes Palace to reignite Arsenal title fight
Gabriel Jesus’s first-half brace fired Arsenal to an emphatic 5-1 win against Crystal Palace to take them within three points of Liverpool at the top of the Premier League.
Resigned Guardiola signals City's complete breakdown
An obsessive Spanish manager had taken his adopted club to rare heights.
How the malicious Grinch bots’ are stealing Christmas
When my brother-in-law tried to buy a Barbie gymnast as a Christmas present for my daughter last week, the doll kept disappearing from every online store he visited.
Pope warns Vatican staff on gossiping and backstabbing
Pope Francis used his annual Christmas greetings to tell Vatican bureaucrats to stop speaking ill of one another, warning that gossip is an \"evil\".
'I feared I'd end up in the trench like the other bodies'
Reporting from the site of a mass grave around 25 miles from the Syrian capital, Bel Trew speaks to a man who dug out the trenches before realising the horror of what was happening
Christmas market atrocity will further divide the West
Does terrorism work? It depends what the aim of the perpetrator is and in the case of Friday night's Magdeburg Christmas market attack it's not as clear cut as it may have seemed in the immediate aftermath.
Germany mourns as death toll from market attack rises
Saudi doctor held after car ploughs into crowd at Christmas event, leaving five people dead and dezens more sala
'Good vibes': winter solstice is celebrated at Stonehenge.
Thousands gathered at Stonehenge yesterday as they greeted the sun with cheers and applause to mark the winter solstice.
Children born thanks to IVF pioneer find biological father is scientist at his lab
Questions have been raised about one of the UK's most wellknown fertility doctors after two people whose parents attended his clinic reportedly made the shock discovery that their biological father is a lab scientist who worked in the same hospital as the physician.