Precedent to be adopted by EU countries: Germany to deport Syrian refugee who carried out an attack near the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin
Germany has begun implementing a new policy against the Arab refugees filling the country, an implementation that will apparently be adopted with great willingness by the rest of the European Union countries that have absorbed millions of Arab refugees who only wanted to take advantage of the West's kindness and improve their lives, and today already regret it from the bottom of their hearts.
It seems that they have found the first reason, out of many that will surely be adopted in the not-so-distant future, for which Muslim criminals can be removed from their country without clashing with the delusional immigration laws that the European Union has already adopted.
German police and prosecutors reported on Saturday that a 19-year-old Syrian man was arrested after carrying out an attack on Friday night, stating that he wanted to “kill Jews,” according to the German newspaper “Spiegel.”
The sources explained that the suspect was arrested with traces of blood on his hands, and in possession of a copy of the Quran and a prayer rug, adding that initial investigations indicate that the attack is “related to the conflict in the Middle East.”
The attack, which took place at the Holocaust Memorial in central Berlin near the US Embassy, left a Spanish man in his 30s with a serious neck injury, but he was later released from critical condition after being treated and transferred to intensive care.
German Interior Minister Nancy Passer described the attack as “a cruel and hateful crime. He must be punished to the full extent of the law and deported directly from prison. We will use all means to deport perpetrators of violent crimes to Syria.”
Police said the suspect arrived in Germany in 2023 as an unaccompanied minor. He was granted asylum and lived in the eastern city of Leipzig, they said, noting there was no evidence of his connection to other people or groups, and he was not known to police in Berlin before the incident.