'To the German people, your country is killing you': Syrian suicide bomber - nicknamed 'Rambo' - appears in chilling ISIS video threatening that the West 'will never live peacefully'
- Suicide attacker detonated bomb packed with metal shavings outside bar in Ansbach, near Nuremberg, on Sunday
- The 27-year-old bomber, Syrian man who was denied asylum, was turned away from music festival containing 2,500
- The blast left 15 people injured - three seriously - and is the fourth bloody attack on German soil in the past week
- Attacker, named locally as Mohammad Daleel, previously treated in psychiatric unit and had twice attempted suicide
- Search of his home reveals bomb-making material and video on phone showing him pledging allegiance to ISIS
- Bomber, who was due to be deported to Bulgaria, was also carrying a roll of 50 euro notes with him at time of attack
- Bavarian police say the attacker had six Facebook accounts, including at least one under a false identity
ISIS has released a video showing German suicide bomber Mohammad Daleel issuing a chilling warning that Islamists will wreak havoc across Europe with car bombs.
The failed asylum seeker warns the West they will no longer 'live peacefully' and that they will be much larger bombings than the one he carried out in the quiet Bavarian town of Ansbach on Sunday.
In the video 27-year-old Daleel says: 'This operation is carried out with an explosive device, but next time it will be with (car) bombs. To the German people, your country is killing you by its actions. Islamic State did not start this war with you.'
Daleel, whose face is totally obscured by a black scarf, attempts to justify what German politicians have called a 'cowardly act'.
The bomber adds: 'To the German Youth: your planes that are shelling us don't distinguish between men, women and even children.'
The twisted video emerged after ISIS issued a photograph of Daleel, who was nicknamed Rambo, to glorify his suicide bombing.
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Pictured: The Syrian suicide bomber named locally as Mohammad Daleel, injured 12 people outside a packed wine bar in Ansbach
ISIS have also released a video this evening which appears to show Daleel pledging his allegiance to the terror group
Crime scene: This is the rucksack that the suicide bomber used to carry his explosives in before blowing himself up outside a packed Bavarian bar on Sunday
A chalk outline where the bomber's body fell was still visible almost 24 hours after the attack. On four tables lay discarded drinks and full ashtrays
Attack: A 27-year-old suicide bomber, a Syrian man who was denied asylum in the country, injured 12 people in a packed wine bar attack in Ansbach, near Nuremberg
They said he was a 'soldier of Islamic state' and described the attack which left 12 people injured as a 'martyrdom operation.'
It was the fourth violent attack on members of the public in Germany in less than a week and authorities have now ordered increased security at airports and train stations.
Today it emerged that Daleel might have picked up his bomb making skills while working with chemicals in his father's soap factory in Syria.
Daleel, who was about to be deported from Germany, had wanted to kill hundreds of young people attending an open-air concert in the market place in Ansbach on Sunday night.
He was turned away from the concert by security guards because he did not have a ticket. The bomber walked to a nearby wine bar where he detonated a backpack containing metal fragments.
The crowd of 2,500 packed into the Reitbarn square had no idea there had been an explosion and were evacuated quickly by organiaers of the concert.
A blood stain on the floor next to a playing card at the crime scene in front of 'Eugens Weinstube' in the Old Town one day after the bomb explosion
The cafe scene where suicide bomber Mohammad Daleel detonated his bomb, injuring passers-by
Police were examining the scene of the explosion, outside 'Eugens Weinstube', one day after the bomb exploded
Carnage: Apart from the blood stained floor the only other visible sign of a bomb attack were shattered glass panes
The bomber had blown himself up under a white umbrella at the entrance to Eugen's wine bar. A record shop and photo studio less than 15ft away were in untouched by the blast
Authorities said there would have been many more dead had Daleel succeeded in gaining entry.
'Had he managed to get into the festival, there would certainly have been many more victims,' said Nuremberg's deputy head of police, Roman Fertinger.
Daleel died instantly while couples sitting outside the bar enjoying a drink at wooden tables were hit by pieces of flying shrapnel.
A hearse containing his remains left the scene of the bombing at dawn while residents at the man's asylum shelter described him as a 'lying attention seeker'.
When police raided the bomber's one bedroom flat in a hotel used to house asylum seekers they found a disturbing video of Daleel pledging allegiance to ISIS.
On the video seized from his cell phone he threatens to attack Germany while pledging his support for the terror group leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
They also found petrol, acid, alcohol cleaner, soldering iron and wires in his flat that could have been used to make the crude backpack bomb.
Forensic teams were examining his laptop and other items seized from his hotel.
As police continue their investigation into Daleel there is a possibility that he could have even been a 'sleeper' terrorists.
Forensics: A special police officer examines a backpack at the entrance of a building in Ansbach, Germany, believed to have contained the deadly bomb
A hearse containing the remains of the suicide bomber - so far the only fatality of the attack - left the scene at dawn yesterday
Sealed off: Special police officers secure a street near the house where the Syrian man, a failed asylum seeker, lived in Ansbach
As security was stepped up in the wake of recent terror attacks, heavily armed police stood guard at the scene
Police raided the Syrian's home in Ansbach as it emerged he had been refused asylum but still allowed to stay in Germany and was not in danger of being deported immediately because of the civil war in his home land
New details about Daleel released by the German authorities show that when interviewed he insisted he was not violent and was escaping Syria because of the war.
During his initial interviews for asylum in Germany he told officials he did not want to 'carry a weapon' against anyone.
He also claimed that he had been imprisoned in Syria for publishing videos about demonstrations taking place against the Assad regime.
He made no mention of the terror group ISIS but mentioned had come into contact with members of al Q'aida after he was imprisoned.
The 27-year-old told officials that his wife and children had been killed after their home in the Syrian city of Aleppo had been shelled by pro Assad forces.
He said he survived and suffering from shrapnel wounds to his knee and was evacuated to Turkey for treatment.
He later returned to Syria but in 2014 began his journey across Europe that would result with him living in an asylum seekers hostel in Ansbach.
According to German media Daleel made his first application for asylum on 21st August 2014 where he spoke out against violence.
'I don't want to carry a weapon against people,' he said, according to Bild newspaper. 'I don't want to bear arms.'
Daleel, a Suni-Muslim, told interviewers that he had studied law for a year and also worked in his father's soap factory.
As an opponent of President Assad's regime he told a panel assessing his asylum application that he was arrested several times and his parents Yousef,73 and mother Kamila,64, were also held.
'I faced death and torture,' he said.
The 27-year-old, named locally as Mohammad Daleel, injured 12 people outside a packed wine bar in Ansbach, near Nuremberg at 10pm on Sunday after being turned away from an open-air music festival filled with 2,500 people because he didn't have a ticket
Claudia Frosch stands during an interview at the crime scene in front of 'Eugens Weinstube' one day after a bomb explosion in the Old Town of Ansbach. She was eating at the table next to the bomber and was inside the wine bar when the bomb exploded
Emergency work: An ambulance takes away one of the 12 injured in the Ansbach wine bar - three are in a serious condition in hospital
He told interviewers he has had no contact with his parents since leaving Syria and does not know if they are still alive. Daleel left Syria on July 16, 2013 in a taxi with others to make their way to Turkey.
From Turkey he was smuggled into Sofia, Bulgaria, and ended up in prison in a town called Lubinedz where he claimed he was beaten up.
Daleel said he was suffering from the effects of his shrapnel injury in his leg but did not receive any medical attention.
Almost a year after arriving in Bulgaria, where he was fingerprinted and lodged an asylum application, he flew to the Austrian capital Vienna with all his possessions in one suitcase.
He arrived on an Austrian Airlines flight OS806 .
After less than three months he crossed the border into Germany and travelled to Munich where he was given a place at the Hotel Christl along with 30 other asylum seekers.
Officials told Bild newspaper he was given the help of a Nuremburg lawyer in his application process, as he was medically unfit due to his knee injury.
An MP, Harald Weinberg, from the far left wing Linke party also took up his case to try and secure his asylum status in Germany.
But having made two suicide attempts, including one where he slashed his wrists, his application was denied. Daleel also underwent psychiatric treatment and was known to police in the town for drug offences.
He was be deported to Bulgaria on February 18 2015, but the process was delayed on the grounds of his mental health.
A second deportation order issued on July 15th and Daleel was given 30 days to leave the country.
The investigation will look to see if this second order sparked the suicide bombing or if it had been in the planning for months.
Forensic experts pouring over his computer will be looking to find out when he established contact with ISIS and if there are any other cells in Germany.
Left, Senior emergency doctor Peter Seyerlein and right, Mayor of Ansbach Carda Seide, who both addressed a press conference following the explosion
Germany's Federal Criminal Police Office has said it is examining 410 leads on possible terrorists currently in Germany.
There are fears now of a backlash against refugees in Germany.
Bavaria Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann had said he found it 'outrageous' that the man - known to police in the town of 40,000 people for petty criminality - had abused the asylum system in such a way.
'It's terrible ... that someone who came into our country to seek shelter has now committed such a heinous act and injured a large number of people who are at home here, some seriously.
'It's a further, horrific attack that will increase the already growing security concerns of our citizens. We must do everything possible to prevent the spread of such violence in our country by people who came here to ask for asylum.'
He told Reuters the recent attacks raised serious questions about Germany's asylum law and security across the country and said he planned to introduce measures at a
The Bavarian government holds a meeting on today to strengthen the police forces and ensure they have adequate equipment.
This morning, an abandoned child's buggy surrounded by bloodstains bore witness to the carnage caused by the suicide bomber in Ansbach.
The man killed by an explosion at a bar in the southern German city of Ansbach was the one who set off the blast, local police said
Hundreds of members of the public were evacuated from the area following the explosion
Emergency services have the city on lockdown as this now become the fourth violent incident in the country in just one week
A major police operation is now underway at the scene of the blast, with heavily armed officers standing guard
Officers cordoned off the centre of the Bavarian city following the blast - in which the suspected attacker is thought to have been killed
The red buggy that can be attached to a bicycle lay below a shattered glass panel that had been hit by metal fragments packed into a rucksack bomb by failed asylum seeker Mohammad Daleel.
Elsewhere among wooden tables outside the wine bar where the bomber took his own life and injured 12 others were several bloodstains on the floor.
A chalk outline where the bomber's body fell was still visible almost 24 hours after the attack. On four tables lay discarded drinks and full ashtrays.
A programme from the open air concert that Daleel had wanted to attack also lay on the table. Police in the Bavarian town reopened the market area where the attack took place having completed their forensic investigation.
Apart from the blood stained floor the only other visible sign of a bomb attack were shattered glass panes. The bomber had blown himself up under a white umbrella at the entrance to Eugen's wine bar. A record shop and photo studio less than 15ft away were in untouched by the blast.
The bombing came after a spate of attacks in the south of the country.
On Sunday, a Syrian man hacked a woman to death with a machete and wounded two others outside a bus station in the southwestern city of Reutlingen before being arrested.
Police said there were no indications pointing to terrorism.
Two days earlier, mentally ill loner Ali Sonboly, 18, went on a deadly gun rampage at a Munich mall, killing nine people and leaving dozens wounded.
The explosion took place in the city of Ansbach, Germany - close to a busy music festival
Thousands of revellers had been enjoying the open air music festival in the hours before the blast went off nearby
Police photographers a flat where the 27-year-old Syrian suspect lived, after an explosion in Ansbach near Nuremberg, Germany
Investigators tdescended on a flat in the town where the 27-year-old attacker is understood to have lived
The flat is understood to have been in a former hotel in Ansbach. A police officer is seen entering the building as investigations got underway
Police were on guard outside a building believed to now act as an asylum centre as they investigated the background of the 27-year-old man
Police officers are continuing to examine the scene outside a wine bar. The attack happened after the man was denied entry to a music festival
The assailant was already known to police for an offence linked to drugs and had also spent time in a psychiatric facility, it was revealed. Investigators work at the scene
And an axe attack on a train near Wuerzburg last Monday wounded five. A 17-year-old Afghan asylum-seeker was shot and killed by police as he fled the scene.
The recent attacks in Bavaria came shortly after a Tunisian man driving a truck killed 84 people when he ploughed through a crowd celebrating Bastille Day in Nice, along the famed French Riviera.
Yesterday one resident at Saleel's asylum centre said he had occasionally had coffee with the attacker and they had discussed religion. Alireza Khodadadi told The Associated Press that the man, whom he would identify only as Mohammed, had told him that ISIS was not representative of Islam.
'He always said that, no, I'm not with them, I don't like them and such stuff. But I think he had some issues because, you know, he told lies so often without any reason, and I understand that he wants to be in the centre of (attention), you know, he needed (attention),' Khodadadi said.
A social worker who knew him, Reinhold Eschenbacher, described him as 'friendly, inconspicuous and nice' when he came to his office pick up his welfare benefits.
The suicide bomber was named as Mohammad Daleel by other asylum seekers who lived with him at a budget hotel. Daleel lived alone in a one-bedroom floor of the Hotel Christl where the German Government paid the monthly rent of 192euros.
The bomber had lived at the hotel on a quiet residential street above the town of Ansbach for just over a year. He was known to his friends as 'Rambo' having got the nickname from other asylum seekers because of his long hair and muscular physique.
'He was nicknamed Rambo because of his muscles and the way her dressed. He would always wear a T-shirts and jeans and that is why he was called Rambo, said Mubariz Mahmood who lived in the same asylum seekers hostel.
'Until today that is what we knew him as. We all called him Rambo.'
Rambo was the fictional character created by actor Sylvester Stallone in 1982.
The original film 'Rambo: First Blood' told the story of a former Vietnam war veteran called John Rambo who fell foul of local police when he returns to a small US town to visit a friend. The action film was huge success and spawned three sequels with the latest made in 2008.
Mahmood said Daleel had not shown any signs of radicalisation towards the terror group ISIS.
He last saw him a week ago when Daleel waved at him from the balcony of his room on the second floor of the hotel used to house up to 35 asylum seekers.
Fellow resident Mubariz Mahmood (pictured) said Daleel had not shown any signs of radicalisation towards the terror group ISIS
Mahmood last saw him a week ago when Daleel waved at him from the balcony of his room (pictured) on the second floor of the hotel used to house up to 35 asylum seekers
Daleel died instantly while 17 others were injured when he blew himself up. Mahmood, 28, from Pakistan said Daleel did not have a job and relied on state handouts during his stay in Germany
The explosion near a restaurant killed the suspected attacker and injured several others in the German city of Ansbach, near Nuremberg
The town's mayor said the blast was caused by an explosive device, and was not an accidental gas explosion as earlier reports suggested
A policeman with a machine gun stands guard near the scene of the attack which left around a dozen injured and one dead
Mahmood said: 'He told me that he had come Syria where the extremists and the Government were fighting. He left the country to get away from the fighting.
'I saw no signs that he had any support for the extremists. I was not aware he had any sympathy for them.'
Daleel died instantly while 17 others were injured when he blew himself up. Mahmood, 28, from Pakistan said Daleel did not have a job and relied on state handouts during his stay in Germany.
He said Daleel had told him that during his journey through the Balkans he had been fingerprinted in Bulgaria and thought the German Government would want to return him to that country,
He said he was unaware how Daeel managed to get his hands on the materials to make a homemade bomb. Police raided his second floor room and sealed off the Richard Wagner Street where he lived.
Residents woken by the sound of helicopter hovering overhead were warned residents to stay inside their homes.
Several of the residents in the street are serving US army personnel from the Ansbach base and were told to stay home while the investigation into Daleel was ongoing.
Three local police officers sat outside the hotel stopping media from going inside. White shutter had been pulled down on the bomber's window. A faded yellow carpet hung over the balcony while a blue ice box was in one corner.
The front of the hotel had more than a dozen bikes resting on the metal railings near the entrance.
Of the 35 asylum seekers who live in the hotel almost all are men aged under 30. Mahmoud said he had seen one of two women at the hotel.
Mahmood, who has a job working as a McDonalds restaurant in the town, said Daleel had told him he wanted to stay in Germany.
He wasn't aware that the bomber had his application rejected and had been ordered to leave the country.
'I think he wanted to stay in Germany. We did not talk much but would speak when we met in the kitchen. He would also wave to use from his balcony. He seemed friendly.'
Mahmoud said by blowing himself up Daleel would make it harder for asylum seekers to be accepted in Germany.
'They are people who are trying to help us and if this happens why should they help us,' he said as he stood outside the hotel where he has lived for two years
'If you do something bad, then people are not going to be so friendly. I don't understand why he would want to do this. This does not help people like me.'
Local residents living near the hotel said it had been turned over the asylum seekers two years ago after business from visitors dwindled.
One neighbour said a local woman offered to teach the asylum seekers German and 17 people had turned up for the first lesson.
By the end of the week only two had managed to stick with the class.
'I think if you are going to live in this country then you should make an effort to learn the language, ' said the woman in her 50s.
'We do not have any trouble from the asylum seekers but last summer I know a lot of the women felt uncomfortable when it was hot and they were wearing less clothes. The men would stare and it made me feel uncomfortable'
One US intelligence official said investigators would now focus on what the bomber was doing before he left Syria and why he was denied asylum.
US sources said the bombing did not appear to be a well-planned operation and could well turn out to be the act of another deranged individual.
Emergency workers and vehicles raced to the scene shortly after 10pm
The incident comes as Germany remains on high alert in the wake of Friday's Munich massacre that left nine dead and 27 injured and a terrorist axe attack on a Bavaria train last Monday that left two people fighting for their lives
Heavily armed police stormed the scene and a large scale emergency operation was underway
Early local media reports had suggested the explosion was accidental, however it was later confirmed as a deliberate act
There have been calls for an inquiry into how the bomber was able to assemble the explosives needed for a terror attack and whether he had links to any terrorist group.
When the blast happened initial reports were that it was a gas explosion. But hours later Ansbach's mayor Carda Seidel said the blast was intentional and caused by an explosive device.
Police said that 'a man, according to our current knowledge the perpetrator, died' in the blast.
As a precaution, the music festival was cancelled, with thousands of revellers evacuated. It was revealed that the man carrying the bomb in his backpack had been denied entry to the festival in the minutes before the blast. Jethro Tull frontman Ian Anderson was due to be performing at the time of the attack.
Eyewitness Kevin Krieger said: 'We were on the festival grounds. A band was playing when suddenly there was a loud bang. We all looked back. A man from security ran to the entrance.
'There were two people on the ground. They had injuries to their heads and necks. I tried to comfort them. The police cleared the area. Nobody was screaming. The explosion was very loud and I felt the shock waves on my body.'
Video footage which has emerged from the scene shows scores of people fleeing the area as heavily armed police cordoned off the city centre.
A spokesman for the Bavarian Interior Ministry said there have not been any arrests in connection with the explosion.
The explosion went off outside the wine bar Eugens Weinstube during the final night of the three-day Ansbach Open music festival in the heart of the city, around 90 miles north of Munich.
Bavaria police said security at the event, held at the Reitbahn near the city's castle, noticed a young man acting suspiciously in the area at around 9.45pm.
The force said in a statement: 'The person was a young man, who carried a backpack and walked up and down the area next to the entrance at the Pfarrstrasse for a long period of time.
'Afterwards he made his way to the outdoor seating area of a restaurant. At around 10.10pm an explosion happened there (at the restaurant), after the young man briefly bent forwards.'
Bystanders thought there had been a gas explosion at a nearby restaurant in the aftermath of the blast.
Witness Thomas Debinski described the 'disturbing' scene in the small city as bystanders came to realise a violent act had taken place.
'People were definitely panicking, the rumour we were hearing immediately was that there had been a gas explosion,' he told Sky News.
'But then people came past and said it was a rucksack that had exploded. Someone blew themselves up. After what just happened in Munich it's very disturbing to think what can happen so close to you in such a small town.'
The concert was shut down and around 200 police officers and 350 rescue personnel flooded the scene, with investigators later confirming the blast had been caused by a bomb.
Herrmann, said the suspect was a Syrian whose application for asylum had been rejected, but he had been allowed to stay in Germany due to the civil war.
He had been living in Ansbach since July 2 and was known to the authorities after committing two offences. He had also tried to commit suicide twice, police said.
German police set up a roadblock in front of the Bayreuth Festspielhaus prior to the opening of the Bayreuth Festival. Following the killings in Munich, the traditional state reception of the renowned opera event have been cancelled this year
The state reception of the renowned Bayreuth opera festival has been cancelled following recent attacks in Germany. Barriers are pictured outside the festival theatre
In January a programme was launched in the city to help refugees assimilate by teaching them the basics of law in their new host country.
The initiative came amid growing tensions and concerns in Germany over the large numbers of migrants, and taught lessons on freedom of opinion, the separation of religion and state and the equality of men and women.
Police are yet to release more details on the attacker and he has not been named.
Earlier, Michael Schrotberger, a spokesman for the prosecutor's office in Ansbach, said his motives remained unclear. 'If there is an Islamist link or not is purely speculation at this point,' he said.
Investigators have appealed for any mobile phone footage taken at the scene of the attack, following similar appeals by Munich detectives who made their first arrest in connection with Friday's atrocity on Sunday.
Security measures at the nearby US airbase have since been heightened with delays expected in the area as a result. USAG Ansbach has about 8,000 staff who provide air traffic hub services for ground forces stationed throughout Europe.
Meanwhile, Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere this morning cautioned Germans against indiscriminately branding all refugees a security threat after a rash of attacks over the last week.
'We must not place refugees under general suspicion despite individual cases that are under investigation,' he said in an interview with the Funke media group after a string of assaults in southern Germany, some involving asylum-seekers.
Chancellor Angela Merkel's deputy spokeswoman Ulrike Demmer later expressed the government's 'shock' after the rash of violence over the last week but also warned against labelling all refugees.
'Most of the terrorists who carried out attacks in recent months in Europe were not refugees,' she said.
'This fact corresponds with ongoing investigations indicating that the terrorism threat (among refugees) is not larger or smaller than in the population at large.'
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We shouldn't dignify suicide bombers with a hearse...
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