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Man apologises in German court for throwing boy under train

AFP
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Man apologises in German court for throwing boy under train
The suspect entering the courthouse on Wednesday. Photo: DPA

An Eritrean man on Wednesday apologised in a German court for fatally pushing a boy under a train during an episode of paranoid schizophrenia, in a case that stoked a heated immigration debate.

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 "I am infinitely sorry, especially for the family," suspect Habte Araya said in a written statement read by his lawyer at the opening of the trial in Frankfurt.

The suspect is accused of pushing the eight-year-old boy and his mother onto the tracks in an apparently random attack at Frankfurt's main station last July.

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The mother was able to roll off the tracks to avoid the oncoming high-speed InterCity Express train, but the boy was killed instantly.

READ ALSO: Boy, 8, dies after being pushed in front of train in Frankfurt

Araya said he could not remember the crime but it "must have happened according to all the information I have received", adding that he was "very seriously ill" at the time.

The suspect, who had entered Germany from Switzerland days earlier, is also accused of trying to push a 78-year-old woman onto the tracks, although she managed to save herself.

That woman told the court on Wednesday she remembered seeing the boy and his mother "flying through the air" after the suspect pushed them, and that the platform was filled with "sheer horror".

Flowers left at the crime scene in July 2019. Photo: DPA

The tragic case led the far-right AfD party to call for tighter controls on foreigners entering Germany, although the suspect was not in the country illegally.

Following a psychiatric assessment, prosecutors said Araya was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia and had "at least a considerably reduced ability" to control his actions.

They say he committed manslaughter, attempted manslaughter and dangerous bodily injury and have applied for him to be placed in a secure psychiatric institution.

He could also be found to have committed murder and attempted murder if he is deemed to have acted with malice and "deliberately exploited the victims' defencelessness".

Judges said Wednesday they saw "a whole series" of indications that mental illness could have rendered him unable to control his actions.

Father of three

Araya did not previously know the victims and showed no signs of alcohol or drug use at the time of the attack, according to prosecutors.

A married father of three, he had been living in Switzerland and was on the run from Swiss police after a violent incident the previous week.

He had recently undergone psychiatric treatment, according to police in the Swiss canton of Zurich where he lived.

READ ALSO: Man accused of pushing boy under train in Frankfurt is father of three

The week before the incident in Frankfurt, he had threatened a neighbour with a knife and locked her up, and also trapped his wife and their children, aged one, three and four, in their flat before running away.

Police said it appeared the suspect had not been listed as wanted in European police databases and had been able to cross borders freely.

Tougher border controls

The case shocked Germany and led politicians to call for heightened security, including more camera surveillance at train stations and tighter border checks.

Conservative Interior Minister Horst Seehofer also saw the case as an occasion to take a tougher line on immigration, suggesting more extensive screening and "occasional temporary checks" at borders.

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A government spokesman said last week that plans for increased security in stations were still under review, but had been slowed down due to coronavirus restrictions.

In a similar case just one month before the Frankfurt incident, a 34-year-old mother died after being pushed in front of a train, allegedly by a Serbian man.

READ ALSO: How Germany plans to improve safety at railway stations

Germany's far right highlighted both killings to once more criticise what it regards as the flawed immigration policies of Chancellor Angela Merkel's government.

"Protect the citizens of our country at long last," the anti-migration AfD party's parliamentary group leader Alice Weidel tweeted at the time.

Araya had been living in Switzerland since 2006 and was granted asylum in 2008.

According to the Bild newspaper, he had worked for a local transport company and was described by authorities as "an example of successful integration".

He was even featured in a campaign by Swiss authorities to promote postive integration.

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