Merkel Government Still In Denial

Submitted by Vijeta Uniyal via The Gatestone Institute,
Submitted by Vijeta Uniyal via The Gatestone Institute,
German police is searching for a Tunisian man after conveniently finding a temporary-stay permit under the driver's seat of the truck that plowed into a Berlin Christmas market, killing 12 people, according to Spiegel Online. The man is aged 21 or 23 and known by three different names, according to reports in the daily Allgemeine Zeitung and the Bild newspaper. According to a slightly conflicting report, the document was in the name of Anis A., born in the southern city of Tataouine in 1992.
Anis A.
As the manhunt continues for the "solider of the Islamic State" that plowed down and killed over a dozen innocent people and injured another 50 in Berlin, tensions throughout Germany generally between locals and the migrant beneficiaries of Merkel's open border policies continue to escalate. One such example comes from the German city of Bautzen, in which a group of local Germans and "young asylum seekers" got into a brawl at the Christmas market after a heated exchange regarding the migrants' playing of loud music from their phones.
Following an awkward admission earlier on Tuesday that the German police may have detained the wrong person, moments ago Reuters reported that Germany's chief federal prosecutor office said the detained suspect in the Berlin Christmas market attack has been released, adding that he does not have enough evidence up to now to pursue case against the suspect.
"The investigation up to now did not yield any urgent suspicion against the accused," the prosecutor's office said in a statement.
Following yesterday's deadly terrorist attack, in which a truck driver rammed into a crowded Christmas market, killing 12 and injuring 48, the German mood has been dour, deteriorating further this morning when the interior minister of the German state of Saarland said on Tuesday that Germany is in a state of war. "We must say that we are in a state of war, although some people, who always only want to see good, do not want to see this," the minister, Klaus Bouillon, told German broadcaster SR.