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Hamburg shooting: Unborn baby among those killed at Jehovah’s Witness building

Hamburg shooting: Unborn baby among those killed at Jehovah's Witness building

The unborn baby of a woman who was seven months pregnant was among those killed during a mass shooting at a Jehovah’s Witness building in the German city of Hamburg.

Police identified the gunman was Philipp F, a 35-year-old German with no prior offences who had been a member of the congregation – but had left 18 months ago with “ill feelings”.

They also revealed an anonymous letter had been sent to officers in January saying the attacker should not be allowed to have weapons and that he might be suffering from a mental illness.

Two police officers visited the gunman’s apartment in February after receiving the anonymous letter to perform a check.

Eight people died in the incident, including the attacker who took his own life.

Officials also said:

  • Among the dead were four men and two women and the unborn baby that was seven months. Police confirmed he was not related to any of those killed. All were German citizens.
  • The mother of the unborn child survived the shooting.
  • Eight people were wounded, four of them seriously. Six of the eight injured are German, one is Ugandan and one is Ukrainian.
  • There were 50 people in the congregation at the time of the shooting.

At a news conference, Hamburg’s interior minister Andy Grote said the lone gunman in the attack ran to the floor above where it took place when police arrived and took his own life.

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The gunman fired more than 100 rounds during the shooting.

Police also said that before the attacker went into the building, he had shot 10 times at a woman in a car outside in the carpark – but she managed to get away.

Mr Grote called it an “horrific crime”.

He said it was “something we’ve not experienced in the past – we see it on TV, we see it elsewhere, we’ve never seen it happen in our city”.

Police were alerted at 9.04pm local time on Thursday to the attack at the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ Kingdom Hall in the Gross Borstel district of Germany’s second largest city.

A special operations unit in the police that was nearby arrived at the site at 9.09pm.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, a former Hamburg mayor, described the shooting as “a brutal act of violence”.

In line with Germany’s privacy rules, police can not release the gunman’s full surname.