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Vienna attack

Austria acknowledges security failings over Vienna terror killings

The authorities in Austria have admitted to security failings prior to the deadly gun rampage in Vienna by a convicted sympathiser of the Islamic State armed group.

Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz attends a wreath-laying ceremony after the gun attack in Vienna, Austria on 3 November, 2020.
Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz attends a wreath-laying ceremony after the gun attack in Vienna, Austria on 3 November, 2020. © REUTERS/Radovan Stoklasa
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Austrian Interior Minister Karl Nehammer said intelligence services had received a warning from neighbouring Slovakia that the assailant had tried to buy ammunition, but that "a failure of communication" had followed.

The gunman, identified as 20-year-old Austrian-Macedonian national Kujtim Fejzulai, was killed by police after going on a shooting spree in Vienna on Monday evening that left four people dead.

Police detained 14 people in the wake of the shooting, the first major attack in Austria to be blamed on a jihadist.

Those arrested were "aged 18 to 28, from minority communities and some aren't Austrian citizens," Nehammer said.

Police say those taken into custody are suspected of complicity with the gunman, but their exact role remains unclear.

The authorities now say Fejzulai acted alone after initial fears more assailants could be at large.

Fejzulai was convicted and sentenced to 22 months in prison in April last year for trying to travel to Syria and join the Islamic State armed group.

But he was released on probation in December and had been referred to organisations specialising in de-radicalisation programmes.

Security tightened

Islamic State -- which has claimed responsibility for numerous attacks in Europe -- said on Tuesday that a "soldier of the caliphate" had been responsible for the Vienna shootings.

The gunman opened fire indiscriminately in the historic centre of the city just hours before Austria imposed a coronavirus lockdown.

Security has since been tightened in the city. Flowers and candles were laid out at the scene of the attack, where chalk circles drawn on the ground by investigators to mark out shell casings were still visible.

But life was returning to normal -- albeit under the new coronavirus restrictions.

"We were scared by this terrorist act of course, but the city remains safe," said Peter Mensdorff Pouilly, an architect.

"We are not going to be brought down by terrorism."

Nehammer told reporters that the BVT domestic intelligence agency had been warned by Slovakia that Fejzulai was attempting to buy ammunition.

"There was clearly a failure of communication," Nehammer said.

He accused his far-right predecessor Herbert Kickl of being responsible for failings in the way the BVT operated during Kickl's one-and-a-half years in office until May 2019.

Nehammer said he wanted a commission set up to look at the functioning of the intelligence agencies.

Chancellor Sebastian Kurz has described the decision to release Fejzulai as "definitely wrong".

"If he had not been released then the terror attack would not have been possible," Kurz told public broadcaster ORF on Tuesday.

'De-radicalisation programme'

Austria's top security chief Franz Ruf told local media that at his last session of a publicly-funded de-radicalisation programme in late October, Fejzulai had condemned the recent jihadist attacks in France.

Nehammer has said the attacker successfully "fooled" the programmes, and that raids at his home revealed plentiful evidence of his radical views.

He referred to a Facebook post in which Fejzulai posed with the Kalashnikov and the machete he used in the attack, together with IS slogans.

"Nobody would have thought him capable of something like this," Nikolaus Rast, the lawyer who represented Fejzulai last year.

He also raised questions about possible oversights by the de-radicalisation programmes Fejzulai had attended.

The organisation running the programmes, Derad, hit back at the criticism, insisting that it had never described Fejzulai as "de-radicalised".

The investigation is spanning several countries, with Switzerland making two arrests and North Macedonia, where Fejzulai has family roots, cooperating with Austrian authorities.

Swiss prosecutors said the two young men arrested were already the target of criminal cases for terrorism offences.

Macron's visit cancelled

A planned visit to Vienna by French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday to discuss the battle against terrorism and "Islamist extremism" was downgraded to a video conference, Macron's office said late Wednesday.

The recent re-publication of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed in France has caused new tensions worldwide, sparking protests in some Muslim-majority countries and calls from several terror groups for their followers to take revenge.

France itself has seen a deadly assault on churchgoers in the Mediterranean city of Nice and the beheading of Samuel Paty, a schoolteacher near Paris.  

(with AFP)

 

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