A terrifying selfie of a ‘terrorist attacker’ in Berlin before ‘stalking motorcyclists’ in a violent car, injuring six people

The 30-year-old Iraqi is accused of injuriesing six other people in a series of car accidents in the German capital yesterday, any intentional concerns.

Named only Sarmad A. due to strict German privacy laws, the suspect intentionally tracked motorcycles, a spokesman for the prosecution said today.

It is investigated by three cases of attempted murder after the attack, which is believed to have been “motivated by Islamists,” said Berlin Interior Sen. Andreas Geisel.

The supposed driving force left a final facebook message unsettling about three hours before the “attack.”

He published a terrifying symbol of his status alongside an Opel Astra like the one used in the turn of fate.

Next to the cliché, he wrote a message praising God.

In an article from the same era, he shared more photographs of the same vehicle.

Sarmad arrived in Germany in 2015, months after completing his graphic design studies at the Karbala College of Fine Arts, according to social media reports.

On June 8, 2015, he posted a selfie and wrote, “Thank God, I finished the last exam and finished the year.”

Just three months later, in September, he shared a symbol of himself in Turkey, before being photographed in Germany that same month.

Many of his social media posts describe the symbol of a young man in general, who liked to play billiards with his friends and ride a motorcycle.

A profile on a date says she likes Kylie Jenner, pizza and Jack Daniels whiskey.

In a November 2015 message, he even replaced his profile picture to have a clean French flag, a popular symbol of solidarity with those who suffered the Paris terrorist attacks through ISIS.

But the messages have a darker tone.

In one, he shared a photo of George Bush, writing, “This destroyed Iraq.”

And in 2018, on the 15th anniversary of the 2003 invasion of Iraq, he shared a message about being “busy across the UK and the US.”

Authorities say the suspect is from “psychological problems.”

Geisel said: “If private disorders are combined with ideas laden with religion, they can lead to uncontrollable acts. Yesterday’s occasions have shown in a very painful way how vulnerable our society is.”

The prosecutor’s workplace spokesman, Martin Steltner, said investigators were investigating whether the suspect was related to a terrorist organization or others were involved in the attack.

Steltner added that the police were looking for a recommendation that the guy would possibly have an conceivable contact with other extremists.

According to Tagesspiegel, the guy is known to Berlin police and was born in Baghdad in 1990.

Three of the injuries were seriously injured when Sarmad allegedly drove his Opel Astra on several motorcycles, some of which collided with cars, on a stretch of the motorway in the German capital.

Six other people were injured, three of them seriously.

He stopped his and put a box on the roof, claiming it contained explosives.

The 30-year-old started shouting “Allahu akbar” or “God is great,” according to the renowned German newspaper Bild.

Then he allegedly shouted, “No one comes near, otherwise they’ll all die!”

The attacker then unfurled a prayer rug along the way and knelt before Der Tagesspiegel.

Armed police had to subdue and detain him, while bomb specialists only discovered equipment in the box.

An Arab transit officer bravely approached Sarmad and drove him away from the car, a movement that led to his arrest.

Steltner said, “The courage of the impressive official.”

Three other people on the bike were injured, adding a firefighter who is fighting for his life with serious head and spine injuries, Steltner said in one day.

Three others affected were injured while travelling in a car when a motorcyclist collided with them after they had traversed the extremist.

The suspect first hit a road in the Wilmersdorf community and then entered a motorcyclist, leaving him with fatal injuries.

He ran over a momentary user on a scooter and used his car to push a third motorcyclist to the front of another car, prosecutor Steltner said.

The suspect was nevertheless discharged from his car near the Alboinstrasse exit in Berlin’s Tempelhof district.

Accidents at 3 other locations in a while before 7 p.m. The local time caused the total closure of one of Berlin’s main roads and caused long traffic jams with some three hundred people stranded more for hours.

This is the first time Berliners have been terrorized by Islamic extremists.

In December 2016, a Tunisian crashed into a truck in a city Christmas market, killing 12 other people and injuring 56.

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