World

Munich gunman ‘spent a year planning his deadly rampage'

People mourn beside the Olympia shopping center where a shooting took place leaving nine people dead in Munich, Germany. Picture by Jens Meyer, Associated Press 
People mourn beside the Olympia shopping center where a shooting took place leaving nine people dead in Munich, Germany. Picture by Jens Meyer, Associated Press  People mourn beside the Olympia shopping center where a shooting took place leaving nine people dead in Munich, Germany. Picture by Jens Meyer, Associated Press 

THE teenager behind the deadly shooting rampage at a Munich mall had planned his attack for a year and chose his victims at random, investigators said.

Bavarian investigator Robert Heimberger said the gunman, an 18-year-old German-Iranian identified only as David S but named in media reports as Ali Sonboly, visited the site of a previous school shooting in the German town of Winnenden and took photographs last year.

He then set about planning the attack in which he killed nine and wounded 27 others - 10 critically - before taking his own life.

"He had been planning this crime since last summer," Mr Heimberger said.

He said there were "many more terabytes" of information to evaluate, and that the teenager's brother and parents were still not emotionally up to being interrogated by police.

There is so far no evidence that he knew any of his victims, or that there was any political motivation behind the attack, Thomas Steinkraus-Koch, a spokesman for the Munich prosecutors' office, said.

The suspect received both inpatient and outpatient psychiatric treatment last year to help him deal with "fears of contact with others," Mr Steinkraus-Koch said. He said medication had been found at his home but that investigators needed to talk with his family to determine whether he had been taking it.

In the aftermath of the attack, Bavaria's top security official urged a constitutional change to allow the country's military to be able to be deployed in support of police during attacks.

Because of the excesses of the Nazi era, Germany's post-war constitution only allows the military, known as the Bundeswehr, to be deployed domestically in cases of national emergency.

But state interior minister Joachim Herrmann told Welt am Sonntag newspaper that the regulations are now obsolete and that Germans have a "right to safety".

"We have an absolutely stable democracy in our country," he said. "It would be completely incomprehensible ... if we had a terrorist situation like Brussels in Frankfurt, Stuttgart or Munich and we were not permitted to call in the well-trained forces of the Bundeswehr, even though they stand ready."

Munich deployed some 2,300 police officers to lock down the city on Friday night, calling in elite SWAT teams from around the country and neighbouring Austria, during the shooting at the shopping centre and a nearby McDonald's restaurant.

It was the second attack targeting victims apparently at random in less than a week in Bavaria. On Monday, a 17-year-old Afghan asylum-seeker wounded five people in an axe-and-knife rampage near Wuerzburg, for which the Islamic State group has claimed responsibility.

Weapons are strictly controlled in Germany and police are still trying to determine exactly how the gunman obtained the Glock 17 used in the attack.

Mr Heimberger said it appears "very likely" that the suspect purchased the weapon online through the so-called "darknet." It was a pistol that had been rendered unusable and sold as a prop, then was restored to a fully functioning state.

Its serial numbers were filed off and the gunman had no permit to purchase weapons, authorities have said.