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Henriette Reker was campaigning for the mayoral election in Cologne when she was attacked on Saturday.
Henriette Reker was campaigning for the mayoral election in Cologne when she was attacked on Saturday. Photograph: Oliver Berg/AFP/Getty Images
Henriette Reker was campaigning for the mayoral election in Cologne when she was attacked on Saturday. Photograph: Oliver Berg/AFP/Getty Images

German mayoral candidate stabbed in attack linked to migrants policy

This article is more than 8 years old

Chancellor Merkel condemns attack on Henriette Reker, said to be in stable condition with neck wounds, on eve of Cologne election

The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, has expressed shock over the stabbing of a political ally, in an attack police said was linked to the migrant crisis.

Henriette Reker, an independent close to Merkel’s ruling Christian Democrats (CDU), suffered serious wounds to the neck in the attack in the western city of Cologne, which is to elect its mayor on Sunday, on Saturday morning.

Police arrested the attacker at the scene, with regional police chief Wolfgang Albers describing it as a political act linked to the fact that Reker was “responsible for taking charge of refugees” in the city, the fourth largest in Germany.

The attacker, a 44-year-old unemployed man, “said he had a racist motivation for committing this act”, Cologne police official Norbert Wagner told a news conference.

Reker was said to be in a stable condition after the attack, which took place at a CDU information stand in a market. Four other people were wounded in the incident, one seriously.

Rival candidates and other politicians formed a human chain in solidarity with Reker on Saturday night. Photograph: Oliver Berg/AFP/Getty Images

Merkel “expressed her shock and condemned this act”, a spokesperson said, while the interior minister, Thomas de Maizière, called it an “appalling, cowardly” attack.

The violence took place as Germany struggles with a huge influx of Syrian asylum-seekers whose numbers are expected to reach between 800,000 and a million by the end of the year.

The chancellor’s open-door policy has provoked a backlash among her conservative allies and sparked protests from the far right.

Justice minister Heiko Maas condemned the attack as “an unimaginable and abominable act”, while regional president Annelore Kraft said it was an “assault on democracy”.

Reker is seen as standing a good chance of securing the mayorship of Cologne, Germany’s fourth-largest city with 980,000 inhabitants.

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