German police on Saturday hunted a man who stabbed three people to death and wounded eight others at a street festival in the city of Solingen, with a terror motive for the attack “not excluded”.

The unidentified knifeman went on a rampage in the western town of Solingen late on Friday, as thousands had gathered for the first night of a “Festival of Diversity”, part of a series of events to mark the town’s 650th anniversary.

On Saturday, police announced they had detained a person as part of the probe, with a prosecutor later saying it was a 15-year-old suspected of “non-denunciation” of a criminal act.

Witnesses had allegedly seen the teen discussing the attack just before it happened with a man who could be the knifeman, said Markus Caspers, prosecutor of Duesseldorf that lies just west of Solingen.

“We have not been able to identify a motive for now, but in view of all of the circumstances, we are working under the assumption that the initial suspicion of a terrorist motive cannot be excluded,” Caspers told a press conference.

The Islamic State group said Saturday in a statement that one of its members carried out a deadly attack a day earlier in Germany in “revenge” for Muslims “in Palestine and everywhere”.

“The perpetrator of the attack on a gathering of Christians in the city of Solingen in Germany yesterday was a soldier of the Islamic State” group, said a statement from the jihadists’ Amaq news agency on the Telegram messaging app. The attack was carried out “in revenge for Muslims in Palestine and everywhere”, the statement added.

The people killed were men of 56 and 67 years of age and a 56-year-old woman, officials said.

“The victims were completely unknown with no known ties between them, so based on this we’re concluding that it could be a terror act,” Caspers said, adding that “no other motive is evident at this time”.

Four of the wounded were in a “serious” condition, officials said, revising down an earlier estimate of five.

“After analysing the first images, we’re going on the principle that it was an attack targeted toward the neck,” police chief Thorsten Fleiss told the press conference.

Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said Germany’s “security authorities are doing everything they can to catch the perpetrator” of the “horrific act”, while Chancellor Olaf Scholz said he “must be caught quickly and punished”.

Thousands of people had gathered in front of a stage on the festival’s first night when the killing started.

“An unidentified man attacked several people with a knife around 9:40 pm (1940 GMT),” said the statement released by Duesseldorf police.

‘A person fell’

“Out of nowhere, a man armed with a knife stabbed people at random and killed them,” regional interior minister Herbert Reul said in comments at the scene.

Witness Lars Breitzke told the Solinger Tageblatt newspaper he was a few meters from the attack, not far from the festival stage, and “understood from the expression on the singer’s face that something was wrong”.

“And then, a meter away from me, a person fell,” said Breitzke, who at first thought it was someone who had too much to drink.

When he turned around, he saw other people lying on the ground amid pools of blood.

Solingen mayor Tim-Oliver Kurzbach said the whole city was in “shock, horror and great grief”.

“We all wanted to celebrate our town’s anniversary together and now we have to mourn the dead and injured,” he said.

‘Brutal and senseless’

Hendrik Wuest, the premier of North Rhine-Westphalia state, also expressed his “shock and grief” in a post on social media platform X.

“An act of the most brutal and senseless violence has struck at the heart of our state,” he said.

Solingen is a city of some 150,000 people located between Duesseldorf and Cologne.

People had gathered in the town on Friday evening for the first day of the three-day “Festival of Diversity”.

It was set to feature music, street theater, variety shows and comedians in the city center and several other areas, it said.

Up to 75,000 visitors had been expected to attend.

Festival cancelled

The Solinger Tageblatt said one of the festival organizers went on stage to announce it was cancelled.

Thousands of people cleared the area, the paper reported, with a journalist at the scene describing the atmosphere as “ghostly”.

“People left the scene in shock, but calmly,” Philipp Mueller, one of the organizers, told the newspaper.

Mueller said the rest of the festival would also be cancelled.

Germany has seen a series of knife attacks over the past 12 months, with the government promising to crack down on knife crime.

A police officer was killed and five people were wounded in a knife attack at a far-right rally in the city of Mannheim in May.

With AFP

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