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Berlin attacker Anis Amri killed in police shootout in Milan, interior minister confirms Berlin attacker Anis Amri killed in police shootout in Milan after four days on run as Europe's most wanted man
(about 2 hours later)
The suspected Berlin attacker has been killed in a shootout with police in the Italian city of Milan. The suspected Berlin attacker has been killed in a shootout with police in the Italian city of Milan after more than three days on the run as the most wanted man in Europe.
Peter Frank, the German federal prosecutor, said investigations into Amri’s associates and a possible wider terror network in Germany would continue, after he was linked with two jailed extremist preachers convicted for supporting Isis.
Marco Minniti, Italy’s interior minister, said police were conducting a routine patrol at 3am local time (2am GMT) when they stopped a man resembling Anis Amri.Marco Minniti, Italy’s interior minister, said police were conducting a routine patrol at 3am local time (2am GMT) when they stopped a man resembling Anis Amri.
“At the moment he was stopped, the man without hesitating took a pistol out of his rucksack and shot the police after they asked him for identification documents,” he told a press conference.“At the moment he was stopped, the man without hesitating took a pistol out of his rucksack and shot the police after they asked him for identification documents,” he told a press conference.
“The patrol immediately responded to the shooting. A police officer was injured but fortunately he is recovering in hospital. “The patrol immediately responded to the shooting. A police officer, Cristian Movio, was injured but fortunately he is recovering in hospital.
“State police officers responded and the person who attacked our patrol was killed.“State police officers responded and the person who attacked our patrol was killed.
“Investigations have revealed that the person killed, without any shadow of a doubt, is Anis Amri.”“Investigations have revealed that the person killed, without any shadow of a doubt, is Anis Amri.”
Photos showed blood in a road in the district of Sesto San Giovanni, where forensic investigators were collecting evidence. Local reports said he shouted “Allahu Akbar” while shooting at two police officers, hitting Mr Movio in the shoulder, before hiding behind a car and trying to flee.
A train ticket found in Amri's rucksack showed he had travelled to Italy from Paris, the DPA news agency reported. The possibility he managed to cross two international borders and enter the French capital while under a European arrest warrant was likely to provoke fresh criticism of EU-wide security efforts. The uninjured Italian police officer, 29-year-old Luca Scata, then chased Amri down and shot him dead. He was only nine months into his job.
The pistol Amri produced may be the same weapon he used to kill the driver of the lorry he used to conduct the massacre. A train ticket discovered in his backpack suggested Amri had evaded authorities in at least three countries despite being the subject of a Europe-wide manhunt.
Amri is believed to have hijacked the vehicle from its Polish driver Lukasz Urban as he was parked up in Berlin on Monday afternoon. It indicated he had travelled by high speed train from Chambery in France to the northern Italian city of Turin, before catching a regional train to the suburbs of Milan, a source told Reuters.
He said police were tipped of that Amri could be in the area, triggering additional patrols.
Amri was shot in a square near Sesto San Giovanni railway station, Il Giornale reported, suggesting he had recently arrived.
The reason for Amri's arrival in Italy was unknown and there was speculation he may have been attempting to reach an Islamist network who could give him cover.
Investigations by counter-terror police in Milan showed the .22 calibre pistol Amri used to shoot officers was the same gun that killed the driver of the lorry that ploughed into the German Christmas market.
Amri is believed to have hijacked the vehicle from its Polish driver, Lukasz Urban, as he was parked up in Berlin on Monday afternoon.
The lorry’s GPS showed it moved backwards and forwards “as if someone was learning how to drive it” before it drove around six miles to the Christmas market, accelerating to plough into stalls packed with locals and tourists.The lorry’s GPS showed it moved backwards and forwards “as if someone was learning how to drive it” before it drove around six miles to the Christmas market, accelerating to plough into stalls packed with locals and tourists.
Almost £100,000 has been raised for Mr Urban’s family, including his wife and teenage son, amid reports he gave his life fighting the hijacker in a desperate attempt to stop the attack.
The lorry’s GPS showed it moved backwards and forwards “as if someone was learning how to drive it” before it drove around six miles to the Christmas market, accelerating to plough into stalls packed with locals and tourists.
Amri fled after the lorry came to a stop, leaving Mr Urban dead in the cabin with knife and bullet wounds. The gun was not recovered, prompting warnings during he was “armed and dangerous” from German prosecutors.Amri fled after the lorry came to a stop, leaving Mr Urban dead in the cabin with knife and bullet wounds. The gun was not recovered, prompting warnings during he was “armed and dangerous” from German prosecutors.
They offered a €100,000 (£85,000) reward for information leading to Amri’s arrest but his eventual discovery on Friday appeared to be coincidental. They offered a €100,000 (£85,000) reward for information leading to Amri’s arrest and it was unclear if the money would be paid out.
No suggestion the suspected Isis supporter was in Italy was made public, with reports of the shooting coming as Danish police hunted a man matching Amri’s description in Aalborg.No suggestion the suspected Isis supporter was in Italy was made public, with reports of the shooting coming as Danish police hunted a man matching Amri’s description in Aalborg.
There was also speculation he may have been hiding out in Berlin after police footage caught him entering a mosque linked to Islamist extremists in the German capital hours after Monday’s attack.There was also speculation he may have been hiding out in Berlin after police footage caught him entering a mosque linked to Islamist extremists in the German capital hours after Monday’s attack.
German authorities had attempted to deport the 24-year-old in June after rejecting his asylum application but a bureaucratic dispute with Tunisia over missing documents proving Amri’s nationality meant he could not be ejected from the country.German authorities had attempted to deport the 24-year-old in June after rejecting his asylum application but a bureaucratic dispute with Tunisia over missing documents proving Amri’s nationality meant he could not be ejected from the country.
Revelations that he had been put under surveillance for six months after being linked to a previous terror plot stoked anger against security services for letting him slip through the net.Revelations that he had been put under surveillance for six months after being linked to a previous terror plot stoked anger against security services for letting him slip through the net.
Amri’s brothers believe he may have been radicalised while serving a prison sentence for arson in Sicily, while he was wanted for armed robbery in Tunisia and known to deal drugs in Berlin. Amri’s brothers believe he may have been radicalised while serving a prison sentence for arson in Sicily, while he was wanted for armed robbery in Tunisia.
  He was also known to deal drugs in Berlin and had been involved in a violent brawl, fitting the profile of young criminals frequently targeted by Isis recruiters with the offer of “redemption”.
Separately, German special forces arrested two brothers suspected of planning a terror attack on a shopping centre in the city of Oberhausen in North Rhine-Westphalia.
Police said the operation in Duisburg had no connection to Amri and the Berlin attack.