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CRIME

Austrian police announce arrests in connection to the Linz Halloween riots

After 129 interrogations, police in Austria identified three 'leaders' responsible for the protests and violence in the city of Linz over Halloween - there were threats of further riots on New Year's Eve.

Austrian police announce arrests in connection to the Linz Halloween riots
Pictured is the Austrian city of Linz at night. On September 15th, several government buildings in Linz will go dark for 'Earth Night' (Photo by Alain Bonnardeaux on Unsplash)

On Tuesday morning, the Upper Austrian police and the Linz public prosecutor’s office presented further details about the Halloween riots in downtown Linz. 

According to regional police director Andreas Pilsl, after 129 interrogations, “a core of 20 people could be filtered out”. Among them were three “ringleaders”: “a 21-year-old Syrian with asylum status, a 17-year-old North Macedonian and a 19-year-old Spaniard”.

Two people are currently detained, according to the spokeswoman for the Linz public prosecutor’s office, Ulrike Breiteneder. 

“Specifically, the 21-year-old and the 19-year-old. Both are accused of grievous bodily harm and common endangerment.” 

A 17-year-old allegedly responsible for the Tiktok video “Tomorrow Linz will become Athena” – the actual call to participate in the riots – has been charged at large. “At present, however, it cannot be ruled out that further arrests could follow. The investigation is ongoing”, the authorities said.

The Linz Halloween riots

On Halloween evening, October 31st, around 200 took downtown Linz streets on a rampage, damaging storefront windows and attacking unrelated groups of people with stones and even firecrackers. 

One thing that draws attention to the episode – other than the unexpected violence – is that many of the people involved were not Austrian citizens. In a country where immigration is always a contentious issue, this issue was bound to make the headlines.

The other point that ensured the riots would stay in the headlines for a while was how they came to happen. 

READ MORE: EXPLAINED: What happened at the Linz Halloween riots? 

According to the authorities, the initial evaluation is that the event was unorganised and the rioters had no clear structure. Instead, it was more likely “a loose gathering of young people who had joined forces via social media”.

Additionally, most of the participants were young men.

The police are still piecing together everything that happened two days after the riots. On social media, there are calls for further rioting (on New Year’s Eve), and xenophobic and racist comments as well, with many blaming asylum seekers and migrants for the events. 

What will happen on New Year’s Eve?

On social media, some young people around Linz had already said they wanted to repeat the riots on New Year’s Eve. A house search in one of the suspects’ homes, the 19-year-old Spanish man, turned up dozens of illegal firework devices. 

The police said they were sufficiently prepared for New Year’s Eve. “The entire standby unit will be on duty,” Landespolizeidirektor Andreas Pilsl noted, “we are relying on overlapping forces.” 

READ ALSO: IN NUMBERS: Who are the asylum seekers trying to settle in Austria?

At present, he said, 1,246 checks had already been carried out on the northern border to prevent explosive devices from being brought in. This would be stepped up by New Year’s Eve, he added. 

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TERRORISM

Austrian investigators seize devices at Munich shooter’s home

Investigators seized electronic devices at the home of a young Austrian who fired shots near Israel's Munich consulate, but found no weapons or Islamic State group propaganda material, authorities said Friday.

Austrian investigators seize devices at Munich shooter's home

German police shot dead the 18-year-old man on Thursday when he fired a vintage rifle at them near the diplomatic building.

They said they were treating it as a “terrorist attack”, apparently timed to coincide with the anniversary of the killings of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympic Games.

Authorities raided the gunman’s home in the Salzburg region, seizing electronic data carriers, Austria’s top security chief Franz Ruf told a press conference in Vienna on Friday.

READ ALSO: Munich Israeli consulate gunman was ‘Austrian national known to authorities’

During the raid, “no weapons or IS propaganda” material were found, Ruf added.

Despite being subject to a ban on owning and carrying weapons, the man managed to purchase a vintage carbine rifle fitted with a bayonet with around “fifty rounds of ammunition” for 400 euros ($445) the day before the attack, Ruf said.

He opened fire at around 9:00 am (0700 GMT) near the Israeli consulate, sparking a mobilisation of about 500 police in downtown Munich.

At a separate press conference in Munich, prosecutor Gabriele Tilmann said investigators were combing through the gunman’s electronic data but had yet to find conclusive evidence of his motive.

But the “working hypothesis” was that “the perpetrator acted out of Islamist or anti-Semitic motivation”, she told reporters.

Austrian police said on Thursday that the gunman, who had Bosnian roots, had previously been investigated on suspicion of links to terrorism.

Investigators last year found three videos he had recorded in 2021, showing scenes from a computer game “with Islamist content”, prosecutors said in a statement.

In one of them the suspect had used an avatar with a flag of the “al-Nusra Front”, a jihadist group active in Syria, said Ruf.

But the investigation was dropped in 2023 as there were no indications that he was active in “radical” circles, prosecutors said.

“The mere playing of a computer game or the re-enactment of violent Islamist scenes was not sufficient to prove intent to commit the offence,” they added.

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