Illustrative: Visitors walk at the Christmas market in Dortmund, western Germany, on December 5, 2025. (Ina Fassbender/AFP)

Germany foils suspected Islamist car ramming plot on Christmas market

Authorities detain an Egyptian, three Moroccans and a Syrian over alleged plan to carry out attack in southern Bavaria with intent to kill ‘as many people as possible’

by · The Times of Israel

BERLIN, Germany — German authorities said Saturday they had arrested five men on suspicion of involvement in an Islamist plot to plough a vehicle into people at a Christmas market.

Officials have been on high alert during the festive season, after a deadly car-ramming attack at a market in the city of Magdeburg last Christmas shocked the nation.

Police and prosecutors said they had detained an Egyptian, three Moroccans, and a Syrian on Friday over the plan to carry out the attack in the southern Bavaria state.

Investigators suspect “an Islamist motive” for the plot, according to the statement.

The Egyptian, aged 56, was an imam at a mosque in the Dingolfing-Landau district, German newspaper Bild reported.

According to authorities, he had called for an attack to be carried out on a Christmas market in the area “using a vehicle in order to kill or injure as many people as possible.”

The Moroccans — aged 30, 28, and 22 — allegedly then agreed to carry out the attack while the Syrian, 37, encouraged them.

All the suspects were brought before a magistrate on Saturday after their arrest and are in custody.

Bavaria’s Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann addresses a press conference at the Conference of Interior Ministers and Senators of the German Federal States (Innenministerkonferenz IMK) in Bremerhaven, northwestern Germany, on June 13, 2025. (FOCKE STRANGMANN / AFP)

Joachim Herrmann, state interior minister in Bavaria, told Bild the “excellent cooperation between our security services” had helped to prevent “a potentially Islamist-motivated attack.”

Authorities did not say where the suspects were arrested.

It was also not clear when the attack was supposed to take place, how detailed the plans were, and which market was to be targeted.

Rising security costs

Last year’s attack in Magdeburg, which saw a car barrel through a crowded market, killed six people and wounded more than 300.

A Saudi doctor — who is a critic of Islam and an adherent of far-right views and radical conspiracy theories — went on trial last month accused of carrying out the rampage.

Taleb Jawad al-Abdulmohsen, a 51-year-old psychiatrist, has admitted to ploughing a rented SUV through the market.

The car that was crashed into a crowd of people at a Christmas market is seen following the attack in Magdeburg, Germany, December 21, 2024. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

In 2016, an Islamist drove a truck into a crowd at a Christmas market in Berlin, killing 12 people.

The rampages have fueled a heated debate about the security of the festive installations, which are hosted by nearly every town and consist of stalls with merchants selling gifts, hot mulled wine, sausages, and sweets.

Some cities have cancelled the beloved winter tradition because of the mounting costs and complexity of ensuring security.

Magdeburg’s Christmas market went ahead this year but only received approval shortly before opening.