Christmas market attacker jailed for life for murdering six in Germany

A nine-year-old and five women were killed when Taleb Al-Abdulmohsen drove into the market in 2024.

52 minutes agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on GoogleBethany BellLeipzig

Reuters Taleb al-Abdulmohsen, a man with greying brown hair and a greying beard, looks on while being escorted by armed security officers. He wears a light blue buttoned shirt. The security officials wear all-black uniforms, including face coverings with only the eyes visible.Reuters
51-year-old Taleb Al-Abdulmohsen pictured attending court on Friday

A court in Germany has sentenced a man to life in prison for an attack on the Christmas market in Magdeburg in 2024, in which six people were killed.

The court imposed the maximum sentence on the defendant, Taleb Al-Abdulmohsen, who is from Saudi Arabia. The 51-year-old was found guilty of murder.

Prosecutors say he drove a rented BMW car at speeds of up to 48km/h (30mph) through the Christmas market in the centre of Magdeburg on 20 December 2024.

They say the attack took place at 19:02 local time when the market was very crowded with Christmas revellers celebrating at the gingerbread and mulled wine stalls. It lasted just a minute and four seconds.

A nine-year-old boy and five women between the ages of 45 and 75 were killed. Around 300 others were injured.

Taleb Al-Abdulmohsen was arrested immediately after the incident.

Prosecutors said he planned the attack well in advance and had acted alone. They said he was not pursuing any serious ideological goals, but acted primarily out of personal motives.

“The defendant’s sole concern was, and remains, himself,” the Chief Public Prosecutor Matthias Böttcher said.

A psychiatric expert said the man had narcissistic personality disorder and an overwhelming need for attention.

Taleb Al-Abdulmohsen told the court he had been motivated to carry out the attack because of conflicts with the German authorities. He said he was angry that the rights of Saudi women were being ignored.

He said very little about the attack itself.

AFP via Getty Images A large crowd gather at a red-and-white cordon at night, holding candles for a vigil. The front row mostly comprises women, all of whom wear large winter coats. It is night time. They are standing in front of a sea of flowers - many bouquets heaped on top of each other, stretching for several metres in every direction.AFP via Getty Images
A makeshift memorial near the scene drew crowds in the days following the attack in late December 2024

Taleb Al-Abdulmohsen was granted asylum in Germany in 2016. It is understood that he claimed to face the threat of persecution in Saudi Arabia, due to his criticism of Islam and the ruling family. The German Press Agency DPA said he came from Hofuf in Saudi Arabia, and is from the Shiite minority there.

Officials say he had a history of anti-Islamic rhetoric and far-right sympathies.

He has been described as critical of Islam and he also voiced support on social media for the far-right Alternative for Germany party, hailing the party for fighting the same enemy as him “to protect Germany”.

Before the attack, he worked at a clinic in Bernburg, as a specialist in psychiatry and psychotherapy. He had been employed since 2020 in a secure psychiatric facility for people with addictions, but had most recently been registered as unfit for work.

He has the right to appeal against the verdict.

A temporary courthouse was erected in Magdeburg for his trial, because of the large number of victims.

Germany’s Christmas markets and festivals have come under attack before, mainly from extreme Islamists.

At the time of the attack, officials said Taleb Al-Abdulmohsen was an “untypical” attacker.

EuropeGermany

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