Five killed, including baby, as car plows into pedestrian zone in Germany

"I just walked through the city center and it was just horrible. There is a trainer lying on the ground, and the girl it belongs to is dead," Mayor Wolfram Liebe said, choking back tears.

German police gather near Wiesbaden-Erbenheim, Germany, June 6, 2018. (photo credit: REUTERS/THORSTEN WAGNER)
German police gather near Wiesbaden-Erbenheim, Germany, June 6, 2018.
(photo credit: REUTERS/THORSTEN WAGNER)
BERLIN - Five people including a nine-week-old baby were killed and up to 15 injured on Tuesday when a speeding car plowed into a pedestrian area in the western German city of Trier in what authorities said appeared to be a deliberate act.
Witnesses said people screamed in panic and some were thrown into the air by the car as it crashed through the shopping zone.
"We have arrested one person, one vehicle has been secured," police said, adding that a 51-year-old German suspect from the Trier area had been overpowered within minutes of the incident and was now being questioned.
Prosecutor Peter Fritzen later told a news conference the suspect had drunk a significant amount of alcohol, and authorities were not working on the assumption that there was any Islamist militant motive to the incident.
Trier Mayor Wolfram Leibe said: "It looks as if we are talking about a suspect with mental issues, but we should not pass premature judgment."
Authorities said a more thorough assessment of the suspect's mental health would be necessary to determine whether he could be held criminally liable.
The suspect had spent the last few nights in the vehicle and did not seem to have a fixed address, Trier deputy police chief Franz-Dieter Ankner said. He had borrowed the vehicle, which was registered in someone else's name, and did not appear to have a police record.
Police tweeted that a baby, just nine weeks old, was among the dead.
The interior minister of Rhineland-Palatinate state, Roger Lewentz, said two women aged 25 and 73 and a man, 45, all from Trier, were also killed. Later, police said a fifth person had also died, with German media reporting that the latest victim was a 52-year old woman. Several of the injured were in critical condition.
TRUCK ATTACK

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The incident shocked residents of Germany's oldest town, founded by the Romans more than 2,000 years ago.
"We have a driver who ran amok  in the city," Leibe told public broadcaster SWR.
"I just walked through the city center and it was just horrible. There is a gym shoe lying on the ground, and the girl it belongs to is dead," he said. He told broadcaster N-TV that people who saw the incident were "totally traumatized."
The Trierischer Volksfreund quoted a witness as saying a Range Rover was driving at high speed and people had been thrown through the air. It said the car had Trier plates.
Officers scoured the area in search of evidence, backed by police carrying automatic weapons. In the streets, Christmas lights twinkled incongruously.
Chancellor Angela Merkel said in a statement: "The news from Trier makes me very sad. My sympathy goes to the families of those whose lives were so suddenly and violently torn away from them. I am also thinking of the people who suffered injuries, in some cases very serious ones, and I wish them strength."
Germany has tightened security on pedestrian zones across the country since a truck attack on a Berlin Christmas market in 2016 that killed 12 people and injured dozens.
In October 2019, a man opened fire on a synagogue in the city of Halle. After failing to get into the building he went on a rampage outside, killing two people.
In February this year a racist gunman killed nine migrants in Hanau near Frankfurt before killing his mother and himself.
Germany has closed bars and restaurants as part of steps to fight the coronavirus, but shops and schools are still open.