Magdeburg, Germany – A Christmas market in the German city of Magdeburg turned violent on Friday after a Saudi national was said to have rammed his BMW through a packed crowd of German families, killing at least 5—including a toddler—and injuring 200, police say.
Before the bodies could grow cold, pundits with the BBC quickly blamed the attack on “socioeconomic factors,” ignoring Europe’s decades-long battle with migrant-related hyper-violence and societal decay.
The latest massacre—which took place Friday evening as thousands attended an event honoring the Christian high holiday—was alleged to have been carried out by 50-year-old Taleb Al Abdulmohsen, a Zionist atheist doctor once featured by the BBC for running a Saudi refugee program.
Gruesome footage of the attack was widely circulated on social media, which purported to show the suspect speeding headlong into a crowd of hundreds of Germans.
While many were rightfully outraged, viewing the attack as yet another migrant-linked spree-killing, BBC newscasters on Friday failed to mention the suspect’s race, instead speculating that he may have driven into the crowd of unarmed, innocent people out of a sense of frustration over “divorce” or “job loss.”
“So the profile of the terror suspect is quite unusual. He’s a 50-year-old doctor, a Saudi citizen… When you look at terror plots across Europe, 50 years old is quite old for a terror suspect…I would be asking very clearly what the motivation is here,” said Christian Kaunert, an international security and policing professor at the University of South Wales.
Before the bodies could grow cold, pundits with the BBC quickly blamed the attack on various “socioeconomic factors,” like divorce or job loss, while totally ignoring Europe’s decades-long battle with immigrant-related hyper-violence and societal decay. pic.twitter.com/e7GcRCL7QB
— Justice Report (@JR_Newswire) December 21, 2024
“I’d be wanting to know his family circumstances. Is he married or have children? All of that would make this attack even more unusual.” he continued.
BBC Security correspondent Frank Gardner also chimed in about a potential motive. “This is unfortunately not the first time someone has used Christmas markets to ram a car into a group of people. We still don’t know exactly the motive. Fifty is a very unusually high age for someone to be carrying out (an attack) like this,” he said.
“There is often more than one reason someone would want to do this. It’s not always purely terrorism; it’s not purely ideology; it could be mental, there could be all sorts of reasons, stress that they’re undergoing, they might have been fired, their wife or partner has left them, they might be extremely upset about something,” he continued.
Who was the Terrorist?
? It is presumed to be Taleb A., a 50-year-old psychiatry specialist from Saudi Arabia. He came to Germany illegally in 2006 and was recognized as an asylum seeker in 2016. From the point of view of the press, he would probably be a “miracle of…
— Martin Sellner (@Martin_Sellner) December 20, 2024
No evidence of either claim was provided to the BBC’s international audience. Instead, reporters asked why there had been no concrete roadblocks—commonly referred to as “Merkel-barriers”—deployed at the event, which could have prevented a “tragedy” like this.
The BBC’s failure to acknowledge a potential terror motive appears tone-deaf when one looks at a recent timeline of such events. In December 2016, an Islamic extremist rammed a truck into a Christmas Market in Berlin, killing 12 and injuring fifty. The perpetrator of that infamous attack was eventually neutralized days later in a shootout kilometers away in Italy.
“Cannot believe what I’ve just heard on the BBC. Two guests, back to back, speculate why this 50-year-old Saudi Arabian committed this attack on the Magdeburg Christmas Market,” said Connor Tomlinson of the UK’s Courage Media on X/Twitter. “Neither mention Islam. Instead, they suggest he might have lost his job, or been divorced.”
Cannot believe what I’ve just heard on the BBC.
Two guests, back to back, speculate why this 50-year-old Saudi Arabian committed this attack on the Magdeburg Christmas Market.
Neither mention Islam. Instead, they suggest he might have lost his job, or been divorced.
We cannot… pic.twitter.com/UhbCUR1DRF
— Connor Tomlinson (@Con_Tomlinson) December 20, 2024
“The second guest then wondered in a later segment why this market had no concrete bollards to prevent the car from driving through the crowd,” he continued. “We would not need such blockades, if politicians had not imported terrorists (into) Europe.”
Joining Tomlinson would be a whole host of voices on X/Twitter to condemn the attack.
Independent journalist and researcher Eoin Lenihan said, “The numbers murdered in the Magdeburg terror attack will be high & include children because schools finished for Christmas today here in Germany. Many workers also finished. Markets will have been very busy with families celebrating the last weekend of the Market season.”
Taleb Al Abdulmohsen, the 50-year-old Saudi national accused of carrying out a bloody attack against scores of White families in Magdeburg, Germany on Friday, was once featured on the BBC for running a Saudi refugee program.
Abdulmohsen can be heard in an interview attacking… pic.twitter.com/V4QfZ6ZtSD
— Justice Report (@JR_Newswire) December 21, 2024
“Our anger must be put into actions. Millions must be deported. No more patience with weak politicians” said Belgian nationalist and former political prisoner Dries Van Langenhove on X/Twitter. “They must support remigration or they must be reminded every minute of their lives that the blood of innocent European children is on their hands.
German nationalist Martin Sellner, who provided constant updates surrounding the attack Friday night, called for law, order, stability, and activism.
“Remigration makes Christmas safe again,” said Sellner on X/Twitter. “Millions have to leave. The European youth is waking up. Tonight we made their demand visible with lasers on the German embassy in Vienna.”
Irish Nationalist Keith Woods used his sizable platform to dispel notions that the attack had anything to do with his religion, but instead, pointed to evidence found in the suspected killer’s X account to make a purely racial argument.
“Based off what is alleged to be the X account of the Saudi who carried out today’s terror attack in Germany, it appears he was NOT a Muslim,” said Woods.
“Taleb Al Abdulmohsen uploaded a series of videos today saying he holds the German people collectively responsible for not protecting critics of Islam like him, and discussed his past as an asylum seeker and working for an asylum seeker NGO. Al Abdulmohsen also reposted numerous pro-Israel posts, including by Israeli government figures. It just shows this isn’t fundamentally about Islam; we need mass remigration of all non-Europeans, regardless of their religion, out of Europe,” he continued.
Even those in the United States chimed in to denounce the latest anti-White racial attack. Political podcaster Warren Balogh used Friday’s developments to demand justice for all involved.
“Bloody horrific attack on a Christmas market in Magdeburg. Hoping 2025 is the year Germans finally have enough,” said Balogh on X/Twitter. “Meanwhile, the US just brought these murderous psychos to power in Syria. Thank you, ZOG”
“Anyone who attacks a Christmas event should be hanged, drawn and quartered,” He added, uploading a photo of Darrell Brooks, the Black man responsible for killing six and injuring scores more in an infamous 2022 Christmas Parade attack in Waukesha, Wisconsin.
All Journos Are Bastards https://t.co/3JUiRYdnnW
— James Kirkpatrick (@VDAREJamesK) December 21, 2024
Much like in Germany, institutional media also played an early hand in attempting to spin Brooks’ attack as anything other than a racially motivated massacre. However, independent research into Brooks’s past life discovered he had a virulent hatred of White people—specifically the elderly—on social media posts and rap songs online.
Meanwhile, the racial replacement of White people from their native homelands has become an increasing cause for concern for those living in the West. The topic has fueled the rise of several nationalist parties in Europe, mainly Germany’s Alternative For Deutschland (AfD), which regularly promotes the idea of remigration for those currently “seeking asylum” in the country.
This article originally appeared on Justice Report and is republished by The Noticer with permission.