A German man stabbed to death one person and slashed
three more Tuesday in what authorities said may have been an Islamist
attack, without ruling out that the assailant suffered mental problems.
Police
said they had arrested a 27-year-old German national who knifed four
people around 5:00am (0300 GMT) at the commuter railway station of the
small town of Grafing, east of Munich.
One of the victims, a
50-year-old man, later died of his wounds in hospital. The others
injured were men aged 43, 55 and 58. One of the victims was seriously
hurt, the other two more lightly wounded.
The "assailant made
remarks at the scene of the crime that indicate a political motive --
apparently an Islamist motive," said Ken Heidenreich, spokesman for the
prosecutor's office. "We are still determining what the exact remarks
were."
Local media reported witnesses as saying the man had yelled
"Allahu akbar" (God is greatest) and "you unbelievers" during the
attack.
If a jihadist motive is confirmed, it would be the
country's third Islamist-linked knife attack since September, but police
were also investigating whether the assailant had previous
psychological or drug problems.
German police stand guard as
forensic experts collect evidence at the site of the knife attack
Grafing train station on May 10, 2016
- Bloody footsteps -
Bavaria
state's interior minister Joachim Hermann said the attacker, named
locally as Paul H., was a German national, as authorities said he hailed
from central Hesse state and did not have a migrant background.
"As
to what extent there were other background factors, or whether this is
more about questions of mental instability or drug addiction, still
needs to be investigated," Hermann said on BR24 television.
In the
dawn attack, the assailant stabbed one man aboard a train, another on
the platform, then left the station and slashed two more men on bicycles
outside, said Bavarian police spokesman Karl-Heinz Segerer on NTV news
channel.
"In the meantime local police received an emergency call,
and the officers quickly arrived at the scene and were able to detain
the man," said Segerer.
Bloody footsteps and police forensic
officers in white plastic suits could be seen at the cordoned-off
railway station in video footage from Grafing, 30 kilometres (20 miles)
east of the Bavarian capital.
"There is no longer any threat to the population," said another police spokeswoman, Michaela Gross.
Town mayor Angelika Obermayr expressed shock at the bloody crime in the sleepy town of 13,000 people.
"We
are an absolutely peaceful Bavarian small town in the greater Munich
region," she said on NTV. "Something like this is absolutely new and has
deeply shocked the people here who only know things like that from
television. - Threat against 'unbelievers' -
"That something like that happened here is absolutely unbelievable."
Last
August, two jihadists claiming to belong to the Islamic State group
threatened Germany with attacks in an online execution video.
In
the rare German-language video they urged their "brothers and sisters"
in Germany and Austria to commit attacks against "unbelievers" at home.
Since then Germany had seen at least two bloody knife assaults blamed on Islamists, before Tuesday's attack.
In
February a 15-year-old girl identified as Safia S. stabbed a policeman
in the neck with a kitchen knife in what prosecutors later said was an
IS-inspired attack.
She attacked the officer during a routine
check at Hanover train station in the country's north before being
overpowered by another police officer.
Federal prosecutors later
said the teenager had "embraced the radical jihadist ideology of the
foreign terrorist group Islamic State of Iraq and Syria" and was in
contact with an IS fighter in Syria.
Last September, a 41-year-old
Iraqi man identified as Rafik Y. stabbed and seriously wounded a
policewoman in Berlin before another officer shot him dead.
The
man had previously spent time in jail for membership of a banned
Islamist group and had been convicted in 2008 of planning an attack in
Berlin against former Iraqi prime minister Iyad Allawi.
According
to the German domestic intelligence agency, some 740 people have left
Germany to join jihadist groups in Syria or Iraq. About 120 of them have
been killed, while about one third have returned to Germany.
BOSTON -- Rick Porcello
didn't allow a run for the second straight start while recording his
fifth straight victory to open the season, leading the Red Sox to an 8-0
rout over the Yankees.
In top form from the start, Porcello (5-0, 2.76 ERA) held the Yankees
to five hits over seven innings, walking one and striking out six.
"Subjectively, you watch the way he goes
about it, he's pitching with a lot of confidence," said Red Sox manager
John Farrell. "The numbers bear it out with the consistency that he's
showing. More than anything, he takes the mound with a lot of
confidence. He's able to get two outs with one pitch with that sinker.
He's been a model of consistency." Jackie Bradley Jr. carried the offense with two triples, a double and three RBIs. David Ortiz drilled his 49th career homer against the Yankees, a solo shot over the Boston bullpen in right-center. Mookie Betts added a bloop two-run single and an infield RBI single.
"We had a number of really good at-bats up and down the lineup, using
the whole field," said Farrell. "Obviously Jackie is swinging a very
good bat right now. David with a big swing to stretch it to 5-0. We did a
number of things well in this game tonight." Michael Pineda
took the loss for the Yankees, giving up five hits, two runs and three
walks over five innings. The Yankees have lost 12 of their last 16
games, managing three runs or fewer in 14 of those contests.
Behind ace David Price, the Red Sox will go for the sweep on Sunday night. MOMENTS THAT MATTERED Bradley on tear: Bradley is turning into a legitimate weapon for
the Red Sox in the No. 9 spot in the batting order. After belting a
game-tying double on Friday, Bradley came up with three more extra-base
hits in this one. In the second, he smoked a double to left, setting the
stage for the two-run single by Betts. In the sixth, Bradley hammered
an RBI triple to the gap in right-center for an insurance run. Bradley
scorched a two-run triple that rolled to the wall in right during a
four-run seventh that put the game away for the Red Sox. Bradley Jr. triples twice in win
Jackie
Bradley Jr. has a big game at the plate, going 3-for-3 with two
triples, a double and three RBIs in an 8-0 win vs. the Yankees
"I think my approach is to try to -- it sounds simple -- but just put
the barrel on the ball," said Bradley. "I don't want to try to force
things, because sometimes when I try to force things, I manipulate my
swing. I just want to put the fat part of the bat on the ball." More > Big Mike hangs in, but bats silent: Pineda didn't have his
best stuff, scattering five hits and three walks, but he managed to
limit the damage to Betts' bloop single that fell in front of Carlos Beltran and brought in Boston's first two runs. With Porcello in command of the Yanks' slumbering lineup, the two runs off Chasen Shreve and Kirby Yates in the sixth inning seemed to put the game away.
"It's tough. You believe in your team, that everything is going to be
better," Pineda said. "We'll be OK. Just continue grinding and fighting
every day and everything will be better." Porcello with great backup: With two outs in the fifth, Chase Headley nailed a hard single off the glove of third baseman Travis Shaw. Brock Holt came up and fielded it and tried to nail Didi Gregorius
at third. As his throw sailed past the glove of Shaw, Porcello was in
perfect backup position in foul ground and made a diving stop on the
throw, saving a run. Porcello dives to save a run
Rick
Porcello dives behind third to save an overthrown ball from getting
away, holding Didi Gregorius at the base in the 5th inning
"I don't know that I had to dive. I played it out a little too much," quipped Porcello. More > Help wanted: The Yankees have been held to three runs or fewer
in each of their last seven games, their longest such stretch since
Sept. 12-18, 2014, and now rank last in the American League in runs
scored. At 8-14, they are six games under .500 for the first time in the
Joe Girardi era (2008-present). MLB Plus: Beltran's single
MLB
Plus looks at the metrics that were produced by Carlos Beltran's single
off the green monster in the 6th inning at Fenway Park
"We haven't been hitting," Girardi said. "I thought Michael battled
his butt off for five innings. We had a couple of opportunities. We're
just not hitting. We're putting ourselves in a bad position because
we're not scoring runs." More > SOUND SMART WITH YOUR FRIENDS
Bradley has feasted against the Yankees of late. In his last nine games
against them, he is 14-for-31 with nine extra-base hits. Bradley's four
triples in April tied a club record last reached by Jose Offerman in
1999. WHAT'S NEXT Yankees: Right-hander Nathan Eovaldi
took a no-hitter into the seventh inning of his last start on Monday in
Texas vs. the Rangers, settling for seven scoreless frames of two-hit
ball as he picked up his first victory of the season. Eovaldi is 2-0
with a 4.24 ERA in three career starts vs. the Red Sox. Red Sox: Price gets his first taste of the Red Sox-Yankees
rivalry in Sunday night's 8:05 ET finale of this three-game series.
Price is 13-7 with a 4.04 ERA lifetime against the Yankees. In his last
start, Price equaled a career high with 14 strikeouts over eight frames
in a win over the Braves.
Watch every out-of-market regular-season game live on MLB.TV.
ait, you thought this was over?
Donald Trump may now be the
presumptive Republican presidential nominee, but voters are still going
to the polls. Meanwhile, the Democratic contest between Hillary Clinton
and Bernie Sanders looks like it's headed into June, even though Clinton
holds a nearly insurmountable delegate lead.
Sanders looks for another win
If
you somehow just happened to first tune into the Democratic race last
week, you might think Sanders is the front-runner — he won the Indiana
primary a week ago and polls suggest he could be poised for another
victory in West Virginia. Clinton has been on the defensive in the state
in light of her comments in March at a CNN town hall in Ohio that, as
president, she would "put a lot of coal miners and coal companies out of
business." The remark was made during a discussion on the need to
transition to clean energy, and Clinton went on to stress the importance
of helping miners who'd worked in the industry for years. Later, she
said the coal comments were taken out of context and that the remark
"was a misstatement." Nevertheless, the damage may have been done.
Regardless,
with only 29 pledged delegates at stake which will be allocated
proportionally per Democratic Party rules, there's not much Sanders can
do in West Virginia to fundamentally alter the delegate math. Entering
Tuesday's contest, Clinton was 155 delegates shy of the 2,383 needed to
clinch the Democratic nomination, according to the Associated Press,
while Sanders still needs 929 more. Those figures factor in
superdelegates — elected officials and party leaders free to back either
candidate — where Clinton has an overwhelming lead. In the race for
pledged delegates, Clinton also has an edge of nearly 300 over Sanders.
Bottom line: Not only would the Vermont senator need to start winning
the remaining primaries by massive margins, he'll also need a
significant number of superdelegates who have already announced their
support for Clinton to switch to him.
How much support can Trump get when he's the only one running?
As
for the Republicans, well, yeah, it's over. Donald Trump emerged as the
presumptive GOP nominee after Ted Cruz and John Kasich bowed out of the
race following the real estate mogul's victory in Indiana a week ago.
In the days since, the biggest storyline has been the reluctance of many
high-profile Republicans — former 2016 candidates, the House speaker
and even former presidents— to rally around their new standard-bearer.
Some have flat out ruled it out, while Ryan, for one, says he hopes
he'll be able to in time.
Meanwhile, Trump will look to rack up
big victory margins in West Virginia and Nebraska, which is also holding
a GOP primary Tuesday (Democrats held a caucus there in March). In past
elections, the margin of victory by the presumptive nominee at this
point in the primary calendar wouldn't have been all that interesting.
But given the ongoing divisions within the Republican Party over Trump,
it will be telling to see just how high a percentage of the vote he can
get (he's already proven his ceiling is higher than most thought). For
point of reference, Mitt Romney became the party's presumptive nominee
in 2012 in late April and garnered at least 65% backing in each of the
remaining contests.
Trump will also move closer to securing the
1,237 delegates needed to make his nomination official. Thirty-four
delegates will be at stake in West Virginia, while 36 will be on the
line in Nebraska, a winner-take-all state. Trump enters Tuesday with
1,068 delegates.
When to tune in
Polls close at 7:30 p.m. ET in West Virginia. In Nebraska, they''ll close at 9 p.m. ET.
جوہری ہتھیاروں کے عدم پھیلاؤ کے حوالے سے اپنی ذمہ داریاں انتہائی ایمان داری کے ساتھ ادا کررہے ہیں، کم جونگ آن فوٹو : فائل
پیانگ یانگ: شمالی کوریا کے صدر کم جونگ آن کا کہنا ہے کہ اگر ملک کی سلامتی کو خطرہ ہوا تو جوہری ہتھیار استعمال کرنے سے گریز نہیں کریں گے۔
غیر ملکی خبر رساں ادارے کے مطابق پارٹی اجلاس کے دوران شمالی کوریا کے
صدر کم جونگ آن کا کہنا تھا کہ وہ ان تمام ممالک سے تعلقات بہتر بنانا
چاہتے ہیں جو انہیں دشمن کی نظر سے دیکھتے ہیں تاہم شمالی کوریا اس وقت تک
ایٹمی ہتھیار استعمال نہیں کرے گا جب تک اس کی سلامتی کو خطرہ لاحق نہ ہو
جب کہ جنوبی کوریا سے تعلقات کی بہتری کے لیے بات چیت بھی کی جائی گی۔
شمالی کوریا کے صدر نے کہا کہ جوہری ہتھیاروں کے عدم پھیلاؤ کے حوالے
سے اپنی ذمہ داریاں انتہائی ایمان داری کے ساتھ ادا کررہے ہیں اور دنیا سے
جوہری ہتھیاروں کے خاتمے کے لیے کوششیں جاری رکھیں گے۔
واضح رہے کہ شمالی کوریا اس سے قبل ایٹمی ہتھیار استعمال کرنے سمیت
امریکا اور جنوبی کوریا پر حملے کی دھمکی دے چکا ہے جب کہ اقوام متحدہ
جوہری تجربات پر شمالی کوریا پر معاشی پابندیاں بھی عائد کرچکی ہے۔
اٹلی میں اسلام کوباضابطہ طورپرایک مذہب کے طورپرتسلیم نہیں کیاجاتا۔ فوٹو: فائل
روم / لندن: اٹلی میں مساجد
کی کمی بڑامسئلہ بن گئی ہے، اٹلی میں16لاکھ مسلمانوں کے لیے صرف 8
مساجدہیں، دوسری طرف بلجیم کے وزیرکوخوف لاحق ہے کہ یور پ میں بہت جلد
مسلمانوں کی تعداد عیسائیوں سے زیادہ ہوجائے گی۔
برطانوی اخبار’دی سن‘ کے مطابق بلجیم کے وزیرکوین گرین نے یورپی
پارلیمنٹ سے خطاب میں کہاکہ یورپی یونین کواس بات کا ابھی احساس نہ ہومگریہ
حقیقت ہے کہ جلد یہاں مسلمانوںکی تعدادعیسائیوں سے زیادہ ہوجائے گی۔ انھوں
نے کہا کہ بلجیم میں 6 سے7 لاکھ مسلمان آبادہیں پاڈوایونیورسٹی کے محقق
اوراٹلی کی مساجدنامی کتاب کے مصنف کے مطابق اٹلی میں ساجد کے علاوہ 800
ثقافتی مراکز اور مصلح خانے ہیں جنھیں رسمی طورپرعبادت کیلیے استعمال
کیاجاتاہے۔
اٹلی میں مساجدکی کمی کے کئی عوامل میں پہلی وجہ یہ ہے کہ اٹلی میں
اسلام کوباضابطہ طورپرایک مذہب کے طورپرتسلیم نہیں کیاجاتا۔ اگر اٹلی میں
فنڈ اکٹھے کربھی لیے جائیںتومسجدکے قیام کیلیے حکام کی طرف سے اجازت ملنا
بہت مشکل ہے اوراکثرمقامی کمیونیٹیزکی طرف سے مسجدکی تعمیرکی مخالفت سامنے
آجاتی ہے۔ انتہاپسندی کے خدشے کے پیش نظرعبادت گاہوںکے لیے بیرونی فنڈنگ
کی حوصلہ شکنی کی جارہی ہے۔ اٹلی کے بیشترباشندے کیتھولک فرقے کے پیروکار
ہیں لیکن 40 لاکھ آبادی کسی مذہب سے تعلق نہیںرکھتی۔
بی بی سی کی ٹیم نوبیل انعام یافتہ افراد کے ایک وفد کے ہمراہ تحقیقی دورے پر شمالی کوریا آئی تھی۔ فوٹو: فائل
پیانگ یانگ: شمالی کوریا نے برطانوی نشریاتی ادارے (بی بی سی) کی ٹیم کو 2 روز تک حراست میں رکھنے کے بعد ملک بدر کردیا۔
برطانوی نشریاتی ادارے کے مطابق ان کے ادارے کی ٹیم کو 2 روز قبل اس
وقت حراست میں لیا گیا جب وہ شمالی کوریا سے واپس روانہ ہو رہے تھے، شمالی
کوریا کے حکام نے بی بی سی ٹیم کے نامہ نگارروپرٹ ونگ فیلڈ ہیز، پروڈیوسر
ماریا برائن اور کیمرہ مین میتھیو گوڈارڈ کو حراست میں لے کر ایک کمرے میں
منتقل کیا جہاں ان سے 8 گھنٹے تک تفتیش کی گئی اور ایک بیان پر جبری دستخط
بھی کروائے گئے۔
بی بی سی کی ٹیم نوبل انعام یافتہ افراد کے ہمراہ تحقیقی دورے پر شمالی
کوریا آئی تھی، شمالی کوریا نے برطانوی نشریاتی ادارے کی اس رپورٹ پر شدید
برہمی کا اظہار کیا جس میں بی بی سی نے دارالحکومت پیانگ یانگ میں زندگی کے
مختلف پہلوؤں کو اجاگر کیا تھا۔