By Madeline Chambers and Riham Alkousaa
BERLIN/BAD AROLSEN, Germany (Reuters) -A 29-year-old man drove into a crowd of people in Berlin on Wednesday, killing a teacher and injuring 14 of her students, as his car twice veered onto a pavement in a popular shopping district, officials said.
“The latest evidence suggests this is a case of a mentally ill person running amok,” said Iris Spranger, Berlin’s interior affairs minister, of the crash near the war-ravaged Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, a landmark in the German capital.
Police identified the driver as a German-Armenian man, whose vehicle eventually crashed into a shop window. He was detained by bystanders and handed over to the authorities.
The fire service earlier said a dozen people were injured and six were in a life-threatening condition. Police later said 14 students were among the injured.
The teacher was accompanying a class of 10th grade students from the small town of Bad Arolsen in the central German state of Hesse, Hesse’s public broadcaster said. That would most likely make them 16- and 17-year-olds.
Two candles flickered in front of the town’s Kaulbach School late on Wednesday.
Officials denied a report by Germany’s Bild newspaper the driver had left a letter of confession in the car. Instead, investigators had found posters about Turkey, which has troubled relations with Armenia.
The incident revived memories of 2016, when a man in the same area of Berlin hijacked a truck, killed the driver and drove into a crowded Christmas market and killed 11 more people.
Bild newspaper released a picture of the driver being detained, wearing a yellow pullover, jogging trousers and red trainers.
More than 100 emergency workers swarmed the scene after the incident. The small silver Renault car was lodged inside a shop after smashing through a plate glass display, Reuters images showed.
Blankets covered what appeared to be a body in a cordoned-off area guarded by police. Rescue workers moved apparently conscious people on stretchers towards an ambulance, including one woman sitting up and another who covered her face with her hand.
“I heard the bang and the crash when we were in a store, and then we came out and we just saw the carnage,” John Barrowman, an actor, said in a video posted on his Twitter account.
The site, on a shopping street near a McDonald’s restaurant, was cordoned off. Bystanders looked up at a helicopter circling above.
The nearby Europa Center complex was later evacuated in case the crashed car contained explosives, police said.
“The federal government has of course learned of this terrible incident in Berlin today and is very concerned and distressed about it,” a government spokesperson said. “Our thoughts, our sympathy are with the injured and their relatives.”
The incident took place near the scene of the attack on Dec. 19, 2016, when Anis Amri, a failed Tunisian asylum seeker with Islamist links, plowed a truck into a crowded western Berlin Christmas market, killing 11 more people and injuring dozens of others.
Amri then fled to Italy, where Italian police shot him dead.
(Reporting by Madeline Chambers, Rachel More, Riham Alkousaa, Nicole Moritz, Thomas Escritt; Writing by Madeline Chambers and Paul Carrel and Matthias Williams; Editing by Alexandra Hudson, Frank Jack Daniel and Howard Goller)