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Two killed, multiple injuries after car hits bystanders in Leipzig

By Thomson Reuters May 4, 2026 | 10:39 AM

By Miranda Murray, James Mackenzie and Tom Sims

BERLIN, May 4 (Reuters) – Two people were killed and three others were seriously injured on Monday when a car drove into a central ​pedestrian zone of the eastern German city of Leipzig, Mayor ‌Burkhard Jung said, the latest in a spate of such incidents in recent years in Germany.

Police arrested the driver, identifying him as a 33-year-old man with German citizenship. They said there was no further danger.

“We are mourning two deaths, currently ‌three ​seriously injured people, and many others who were ⁠injured,” Jung told journalists ⁠at a media briefing on Monday evening, according to Leipziger Volkszeitung.

“It’s impossible to find the right words for this horrific attack,” he added.

Like other European countries, Germany has witnessed a series of car-ramming ​and stabbing incidents in recent years, some of which involved religious or political motivations and some carried out by people with mental ⁠health issues.

The prime minister of the state ⁠of Saxony, Michael Kretschmer, said that the suspect had ​possible mental health issues, and officials said he surrendered without resistance, Leipziger ​Volkszeitung reported.

Police conducted a large-scale operation in the area with ‌multiple emergency vehicles and road closures.

A city press release called it a “mass casualty event” but officials were unable to quantify the injuries.

A damaged Volkswagen SUV with a person on top of the vehicle was seen ⁠speeding through a pedestrian zone, local broadcaster Radio Leipzig reported.

Last year, two people were killed in the western city of Mannheim, when a 40-year-old man ⁠drove a car ‌into a group of pedestrians, only weeks after ⁠a similar attack on a trade union demonstration in ​Munich, ‌killing two and injuring more than 40, many children ​among them.

In ⁠December 2024, several people were killed in a car-ramming attack on a Christmas market in the eastern city of Magdeburg. That incident came months after a stabbing attack at a festival in the western city of Solingen.

(Reporting Miranda Murray, James Mackenzie and Tom Sims; Editing by Thomas Seythal ​and Bill Berkrot)