Two people have been killed by fireworks amid new year celebrations in Germany, it has emerged.
In
the first horrific incident, a 35-year-old man died after igniting
fireworks or party guests in a garden in Gusow-Platkow in the
Brandenburg region outside Berlin.
Guest desperately tried to save his life, but he died at the scene before midnight.
On
the same night, a 19-year-old suffered fatal head injuries after he set
off a homemade device in Kleinmachnow, in the same region of Germany.
German
police called it a 'frightening New Year's Eve' following the two
deaths and have launched criminal investigations into both fatalities.
Officers said both victims had been killed as a result of 'improper handling' of fireworks.
Meanwhile,
at least five people underwent amputations having suffered shocking
injuries after fireworks accidents across the country.
In
Berlin, 21 were treated for fireworks-related wounds while there were
also reports of fireworks being aimed at police and fire crews.
There are reports that a
schoolboy aged just 11 was left with severe eye injuries in Berlin after
being hit by a firecracker thrown into a crowd.
A 17-year-old was also left with a burnt hip after being hit at an event in Neuruppin.
But
the country avoided a repeat of the mass groping in Cologne in 2016,
amid heightened security and efforts to protect women from sexual
harassment.
Police in Cologne reported seven
cases of sexual harassment, while Berlin police reported 10 and seven
arrests as several hundred thousand people celebrated at the city's
Brandenburg Gate.
Police
sought to prevent a repeat of New Year 2016 in Cologne, when hundreds of
women were groped and robbed, mostly by groups of migrants.
In
December of that year it was reported that in total, 1,222 criminal
complaints were investigated by the authorities in Cologne, of which 513
involved an accusation of sexual assault.
These included sexual coercion, rape and sexually motivated insults.
The attacks sparked outrage across Germany amid tensions over the arrival in the country of 1.1million refugees in 2015.
For this season's event, Berlin's
main New Year's Eve party had a 'safe space' for women, staffed by the
German Red Cross, at the capital city's famous Brandenburg Gate.
Women were told to seek help from other revelers if they feel harassed or threatened.
0 comments:
Post a Comment