The perpetrator of the deadly Christmas market massacre that has left at least two dead and nearly 70 injured is an anti-Islam doctor who arrived in Germany in 2006 as a refugee from Saudi Arabia, MailOnline can reveal.
The attack, carried out by 50-year-old psychologist Taleb al-Abdulmohsen, saw him ram into a massive crowd at a Christmas market in Magdeburg on December 20 with a dark BMW.
Footage taken in the minutes after the crash, which happened at around 7pm, showed al-Abdulmohsen get arrested at gunpoint by German police.Â
MailOnline can reveal that al-Abdulmohsen, a specialist in psychiatry and psychotherapy from the Saudi Arabian city of Hofuf, moved to Germany in 2006 and lives in Bernburg. He has been recognised as a refugee since 2016.
Previous media reports suggest he had worked to help ex-Muslims, particularly women, to flee Saudi Arabia after turning their backs on the religion.
Analysis of his social media reveals tweets in support of Germany’s anti-immigration party AfD, while he has also made comments supporting Elon Musk and far-right thug Tommy Robinson.
‘If you listen to someone like Tommy Robinson or even Elon Musk, and even if you don’t want to know/hear anything about Islamization, you will think that they are both conspiracy theorists,’ al-Abdulmohsen said.Â
‘But I can say from experience that everything Robinson says, what Musk says, what Alex Jones says, or anyone who is described by traditional media as a radical or right-wing extremist – they are telling the truth.’Â
The account’s bio reads: ‘Saudi Military Opposition. Germany chases female Saudi asylum seekers, inside and outside Germany, to destroy their lives. Germany wants to islamize Europe.’
Posts include retweets of graphic videos, including one of a young Muslim woman purportedly being stoned to death ‘because she had an affair with a young man outside of marriage.’
Another was a retweet of a post that simply read: ‘Can you find one positive thing about Islam?’
In videos posted hours before the attack, he claimed that German authorities were opening his mail and stealing items including a USB stick.Â
‘I consider the Germans, as citizens, responsible for the persecution I am facing,’ he said in one video.Â
‘Currently in this country, the nation that is actively criminally chasing Islam critics is the German nation’, he said in another.
He also appears to be a fan of AfD. In June, he retweeted party leader Alice Weidel, writing with typos: ‘The left are crazy. We need the AfD to protect the police from them.’
He also retweeted the right-wing extremist AfD activist Naomi Seibt with the following quote: ‘Tyranny is based on the docility of cowards. I choose to be brave.’Â
He was arrested following the crash which took place at 7.04pm in the city of Magdeburg, according to unidentified government officials in the state of Saxony-Anhalt who spoke to the dpa news agency.Â
He was interviewed by the Frankfurter Rundschau, a regional newspaper, in 2019 for his work in helping people to escape Saudi Arabia if they, like him, were allegedly facing persecution.
‘He came to Germany as a visiting doctor during his specialist training as a psychotherapist and later applied for asylum here because he had been threatened with death for turning away from Islam.Â
‘The 44-year-old is recognized as a political refugee’, the newspaper wrote of him five years ago.Â
In the Frankfurter Rundschau interview, he described his work with the wearesaudis.net website, a group dedicated to providing information on ‘escape routes’ for people living in Saudi Arabia, particularly women.Â
He said in the 2019 interview: ‘Nine out of ten people from Saudi Arabia who ask me about the asylum system are women.Â
‘Other asylum activists report similar figures. This may be because for Saudi Arabian women, asylum is the only path to justice. Even if a woman is not oppressed, her fate depends on her male guardian.Â
‘There are women who say that they have good husbands who do not oppress them, but they wonder what will happen if the man dies.Â
‘If the new man beats her, she will not get any help. A woman is only protected if she has powerful men in her family.’
Just eight days before carrying out the attack, Al-Abdulmohsen gave an interview with the right-wing RAIR Foundation in which he said: ‘If a Syrian citizen applies for asylum in Germany, the chance to be granted asylum is 99.8 per cent.
‘While if a Saudi citizen applies for asylum in Germany, that chance is only 70 per cent, and I know personally that many of those rejected are ex-Muslims.Â
‘Germany is welcoming Syrians—including many Islamists—while simultaneously rejecting Saudi apostates, people who are genuinely fleeing Sharia-based death sentences.’
As news of the attack spread around the world, RAIR sought to distance itself from the German Christmas market suspect.
It said in a statement: ‘Previously, RAIR Foundation USA conducted an interview with Mr. Al Abdulmohsen, during which he presented himself as someone assisting ex-Muslim refugees fleeing persecution from Saudi Arabia.
‘If these reports are accurate, it appears we and other media outlets were misled regarding his true intentions.
‘We are actively seeking more information and will provide updates as they become available.’
Video footage of the moment he was arrested appears to show armed police crowding around a dark car as a bearded man is told to get on the ground.
Several police officers were seen crowding around the man with their weapons drawn while shouting at him.Â
Cops were also seen shooing the growing crowd around the arrest incident, as a police officer crouches down over him with a torch.Â
German broadcaster MDR reported that his vehicle, reported to be a rental, was being examined for potential explosives after luggage was seen on the passenger seat. No explosives were found in the search.
City authorities say two people, including a toddler, have died, while another 68 people were injured, 15 seriously.
Bild reported that the car was driven ‘at least 400m (1,300ft) across the Christmas market’, per a police spokesperson.Â
Local authorities said that around 100 firefighters are at the scene with seven fire brigades, while 50 rescue service personnel are there. Â
Graphic video footage MailOnline has chosen not to publish shows the dark BMW careening into the dense crowd, leaving dozens of people lying on the floor.Â
Within seconds, countless revellers can be see fleeing for their lives in the wake of the crash. Separate footage showed children crying loudly as several small crowds of people formed over those injured in the crash, in apparent attempts to help them.Â
One man who spoke to German newspaper Mitteldeutsche Zeitung said the scene was ‘war-like’, while another eyewitness said there were countless families in the ‘fairytale area’ of the market when the car crashed through the crowd.Â
The Magdeburg Christmas market is located on the Old Market, directly next to Magdeburg Town Hall near the River Elbe, and was closed by organisers following the incident.Â
Organisers asked people to leave the city centre. A spokesperson in the city said that all hospitals are ‘preparing for a mass casualty event.’
Magdeburg’s University Hospital said it was ‘taking care of 10 to 20 patients’, adding it was preparing for more.Â
Neighbouring cities, including Halle, around 50 miles from Magdeburg, are preparing its hospitals to take on victims.Â
Halle is also stepping up its own security measures in the wake of the incident.Â
Regional government spokesperson Matthias Schuppe and city spokesperson Michael Reif said they suspected it was a deliberate act.
‘The pictures are terrible,’ Reif said. ‘My information is that a car drove into the Christmas market visitors, but I can’t yet say from what direction and how far.’
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz expressed his concern in a post to X, writing: ‘The reports from Magdeburg suggest something bad. My thoughts are with the victims and their families.’
In a post to X, Germany’s interior minister said: ‘The news from Magdeburg is deeply shocking. The emergency services are doing everything they can to care for the injured and save lives.
‘Our thoughts are with the victims and their families. The security authorities will clarify the background.’
Saxony-Anhalt’s Prime Minister Reiner Haseloff said in the wake of the attack: ‘This is a terrible event, especially now in the days before Christmas.’
Haselhoff is said to be travelling to the city to bear witness to the aftermath of the attack.Â
Robert Habeck, Germany’s vice-chancellor, said in a post to X: ‘What terrible news from Magdeburg, where people wanted to spend the Advent season in peace and community.Â
‘My thoughts are with the victims and their families. I thank all the emergency services on site who are doing everything they can to help and to clarify the background.’
CDU candidate for chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) wrote on X: ‘This is very depressing news from Magdeburg. My thoughts are with the victims and their families. I thank all emergency services who are caring for the injured on site.’
AfD leader Alice Weidel, meanwhile, wrote on the platform: ‘The images from Magdeburg are shocking! My thoughts are with the bereaved and injured. When will this madness end?’
Magdeburg, which is west of Berlin, is the state capital of Saxony-Anhalt and has about 240,000 inhabitants.Â
The horror crash comes less than a month after Germany’s interior minister Nancy Faeser said that while there were no concrete indications of a danger to Christmas markets this year, it was wise to be vigilant.Â