A two-year-old child and a 41-year-old man were the two killed in the deadly stabbing, according to German Police. The police have confirmed the suspect in the Aschaffenburg, Germany stabbing is 28-year-old Afghan national.
Berlin blames Bavaria. Bavaria blames Berlin. With migrants suspected in several deadly attacks, German politicians are jostling for position with calls to reform migration ahead of February's federal election.
A stabbing attack in Aschaffenburg, Bavaria resulted in two deaths, including a child, and two severe injuries. The suspect, a 28-year-old Afghan citizen, was captured after attempting to flee via train tracks.
A person has been arrested after the attack in the southern German state of Bavaria. Attack comes as Germany on security alert ahead of elections. Aschaffenburg lies in the northern part of the German state of Bavaria,
A stabbing attack in Aschaffenburg, Bavaria, resulted in the deaths of two people, including a two-year-old boy. Two others were injured. The attacker, a 28-year-old Afghan citizen, was detained. The motive remains unknown as investigations continue.
Two people, including a 2-year-old boy, have been killed and three others were injured in a stabbing attack in Bavaria.
ALBAWABA- A brutal stabbing attack in Aschaffenburg, northwestern Bavaria, has claimed the lives of a two-year-old toddler and a 41-year-old man, leavin
Following the fatal knife attack in Aschaffenburg in northern Bavaria, the 28-year-old suspect is to be brought before a magistrate on Thursday,
Following the killing of two people in Bavaria by an Afghan refugee, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz expressed his frustration over the recurring occurrence of such horrific events and called for a thorough investigation into the presence of the perpetrator in Germany.
People in the city of Aschaffenburg are grieving with the mayor warning of a "spiral of violence and hatred" after a stabbing attack killed two people. A judge ordered the suspect be placed in psychiatric care.
German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser on Thursday criticized authorities in the southern state of Bavaria following the fatal stabbings in Aschaffenburg. The minister said Bavarian officials must explain why the Afghan suspect in the attack had still been at large at the time of the stabbings,