Villach stabbing was Islamist attack, says minister
A stabbing in Austria that killed a 14-year-old boy and wounded five others was an Islamist attack, the country’s interior minister has said.
The attack took place on Saturday at Villach, a town near the border with Italy and Slovenia.
A 23-year-old Syrian asylum seeker was detained at the scene.
Interior Minister Gerhard Karner said the attack was linked to the Islamic State group and the suspect appeared to have been radicalised online “within a very short space of time”.
Authorities previously said he had a temporary residence permit and was waiting for a decision on his asylum application.
Speaking at a news conference on Sunday, Karner said this was an “Islamist attack with IS links by an attacker who, according to the investigations so far, was obviously radicalised online, via the internet, within a very short space of time.
“So those in a position of responsibility, the police, the authorities, must draw the necessary conclusions from that.”
The attack took place around 16:00 local time (15:00 GMT) near the town’s main square.
Two of the five people injured were in a serious condition as of Saturday evening.
A delivery worker, also a Syrian man, who had driven his vehicle at the attacker helped prevent more injuries, police said.
The attack comes amid a national debate over asylum laws and an election last year that saw the far-right Freedom Party come out on top for the first time.
The party has failed to form a coalition government, leaving Austria’s President Alexander Van der Bellen weighing up whether to call a snap election, form a minority government or invite other parties or a group of experts to try and form an administration.
Herbert Kickl, the head of the Freedom Party, seized on the Villach attack, saying on Saturday that Austria needs a “rigorous crackdown on asylum”.
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