BSS
  16 Oct 2025, 10:15

Afghan man faces trial over knife attack on toddlers in Germany

FRANKFURT, Germany, Oct 16, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - An Afghan man will go on trial in Germany on Thursday accused of a deadly knife attack targeting a group of toddlers that inflamed a heated pre-election debate on immigration.

Germany was shocked by the stabbing attack that killed a two-year-old boy and a 41-year-old man who tried to protect the children and left three others wounded in the southern city of Aschaffenburg.

The suspect arrested at the scene of the January 22 attack has been partially named, in line with usual practice by the German judiciary, as 28-year-old Enamullah O.

He has a long history of mental illness and prosecutors said an expert assessment concluded his psychiatric state meant he was not criminally responsible.

The public prosecutor's office said there was no indication the suspect acted out of extremist or terrorist motivation, and they were seeking to have him permanently confined to a psychiatric facility.

Five toddlers from a kindergarten class were sitting together in a wooden cart, accompanied by two teachers, when the assailant attacked them with a kitchen knife in a park in the Bavarian town.

The attacker injured a two-year-old Syrian girl, one of the teachers as well as a 72-year-old man who had also tried to protect the children.

The suspect was arrested shortly afterwards and it soon emerged that the authorities had tried and failed in 2023 to deport him to Bulgaria -- the first EU country he had arrived in.

In August 2024, he allegedly threatened a fellow resident at an accommodation for asylum seekers in the nearby town of Alzenau with a butcher's knife and caused her minor injuries.

The Aschaffenburg stabbings, which followed a string of other bloody attacks in Germany, provoked intense political reactions.

Friedrich Merz, the leader of the centre-right Christian Democrats who went on to become chancellor, promised a "fundamental" overhaul of asylum rules and strict border controls "from day one" if elected.

About a week later, Merz, then the opposition leader, relied on support from the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) to pass a non-binding resolution through parliament demanding stricter immigration and refugee policies.

Merz's decision to rely on far-right support broke a longstanding taboo in post-World War II German politics, prompting fierce criticism and mass street protests.