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Crime

Interior Ministry under pressure amid Chemnitz manhunt

September 4, 2018

Two suspects are in custody for the stabbing death of Daniel H., a warrant has been issued for a third. Pressure is mounting on politicians to say where these men came from and why they were allowed to stay in Germany.

https://p.dw.com/p/34IuC
Flowers and a wooden cross at a memorial for Daniel H. in Chemnitz
Image: picture-aliance/dpa/S. Kahnert

Police in the German state of Saxony announced on Tuesday that they were "urgently" seeking a third suspect in the murder of Daniel H. in the city of Chemnitz. The 35-year-old's stabbing death touched off a week of far-right protests and counter-demonstrations, some of which turned violent.

"The district court in Chemnitz issued a warrant this morning," said Saxony's top prosecutor Hans Strobl. The authorities issued a wanted poster for the suspect, named Farhad Ramazan Ahmad, and listed him as a 22-year-old Iraqi citizen who they warned was possibly armed and dangerous. His photo and full name were released (and are published here) owing to it being an active manhunt.

Murder suspect Farhad Ramazan Ahmad
Police are hoping to find suspect Farhad Ramazan AhmadImage: Polizei Sachsen

Identity confusion

Two men have already been taken into custody over the killing, but their identities and backgrounds remain something of a mystery. The men were first identified as one Syrian and one Iraqi, but the authorities have now clarified that one of the suspect's Iraqi ID card and other documents were "total counterfeits."

The other man is registered as a Syrian refugee, but that status was granted based only on information he had provided authorities.

Read more: After Chemnitz protests, Eastern Germany rife with anxiety

Saxony state’s businesses worry about their reputation

Seehofer blames staff shortage

Germany's Interior Minister Horst Seehofer has been under pressure to provide answers as to how two violent men could be given protection as refugees, especially considering his own anti-migration stance.

Seehofer clarified that the Federal Bureau of Migration and Refugees (BAMF) had said that the investigation into the documents provided by the men "took too long," and that the agency lacked enough highly trained analysts to verify the documents. He said that he had called for BAMF to hire more staff six months ago.

Chancellor Angela Merkel also said on Tuesday that she will travel to Chemnitz after being invited by Mayor Barbara Ludwig. She did not confirm precisely when, but the visit is expected in October.

Editor's note: Deutsche Welle follows the German press code, which stresses the importance of protecting the privacy of suspected criminals or victims and obliges us to refrain from revealing full names in such cases. In this instance, however, a suspect's full name has been used due to an active manhunt. 

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Elizabeth Schumacher Elizabeth Schumacher reports on gender equity, immigration, poverty and education in Germany.