Readers like you keep news free for everyone.
More than 5,000 readers have already pitched in to keep free access to The Journal.
For the price of one cup of coffee each week you can help keep paywalls away.
Readers like you keep news free for everyone.
More than 5,000 readers have already pitched in to keep free access to The Journal.
For the price of one cup of coffee each week you can help keep paywalls away.
A GERMAN MAN suspected of kidnapping and killing a four-year-old Bosnian refugee has admitted to murdering another child, police have said.
“The man confessed overnight that he had also killed Elias,” said Berlin police spokesman Stefan Redlich, referring to a six-year-old German boy who has been missing since July.
Following the confession, Elias’ body was found in a garden allotment, sources said.
Both children were victims of sex crimes, German news agency DPA said without citing its sources.
A child’s body
The man was arrested yesterday after his mother told police that he may have been involved in the kidnapping of the Bosnian boy, Mohamed Januzi.
In the suspect’s car police found the body of a child, which was packed in cat litter and which appeared to have been dead for some time.
Prosecutors said the body, which was undergoing an autopsy, was likely to be that of Mohamed.
The boy had been missing since October 1, when his mother took him and his sisters to Berlin’s main refugee registration centre known as Lageso which receives hundreds of asylum seekers daily.
CCTV footage
The family has been living in Germany for more than a year and the mother had gone to the registration centre that day to obtain her social allowances, according to local media.
Police subsequently issued CCTV footage of a bearded man leading a child away who was holding a stuffed toy.
“Mohamed was already dead on October 2, the day after his kidnapping,” police spokesman Redlich said, adding that the suspect had admitted to that during interrogation.
As Germany gears up to receive up to one million asylum seekers this year, Berlin’s Lageso has seen lengthy queues of migrants waiting to be registered and often chaotic scenes.
Fights have broken out at the centre among migrants frustrated by the long waits and a lack of information filtering down from authorities.
- © AFP 2015.
To embed this post, copy the code below on your site