The 41-year-old man
had been convicted in 2008 of planning an attack in Berlin against former Iraqi prime minister
Iyad Allawi, a prosecution spokesman told AFP.
Thursday's incident
began around 0700 GMT, when four police cars were called to the western Berlin district of
Spandau because the man was reported acting aggressively and threatening
passers-by, police said.
When a policewoman
approached him, he stabbed her with a knife with a nine-centimetre (3.5 inch)
blade in the neck area, before one of her colleagues opened fire, killing the
Iraqi man and "suspected Islamist", prosecutors said.
The 44-year-old
woman was also hit accidentally by one of the bullets fired by her police
colleague, said the prosecution service.
The Iraqi man had in the morning removed an
electronic ankle monitor he had been ordered to wear after being released from
prison.
National news
agency DPA quoted chief prosecutor Dirk Feuerberg as saying it was too early to
speculate about a "terrorist motive", and that the man's apartment
was being searched.
A picture taken on on July 15, 2008 shows Rafik Y during
his trial in
|
The attacker died
in an ambulance shortly after being shot, despite attempts to revive him.
- 'Hot-tempered,
aggressive' -
Prosecution service
spokesman Martin Steltner identified the Iraqi man as "Rafik Y.",
saying he was sentenced in 2008 to an eight-year prison term for his role in a
plot against Allawi.
In the court case
in the southwestern city of Stuttgart ,
Rafik Mohamad Yousef was one of three Iraqi men sentenced to jail terms,
including time already spent behind bars during their trials.
News site Spiegel
Online reported he had returned to Berlin
in 2013, and was kept under surveillance.
Die Welt daily
wrote that the convict could not be deported to Iraq under German law because he
would face the death penalty there.
The three men had
been convicted of belonging to a foreign terrorist organisation -- Iraqi
militant group Ansar al-Islam -- and attempted conspiracy to commit murder.
Ansar al-Islam, a
predominantly Kurdish group, was believed to have links to Al-Qaeda in Iraq .
Yousef was believed
to have volunteered to carry out the attack on Allawi, the court heard.
Presiding judge
Christine Rebsam-Bender described Yousef as "hot-tempered and
aggressive" and cited his frequent outbursts, including an attack on a
prison guard that broke the officer's rib.
"Because they
are Nazis!" Yousef shouted at the judge.
Intelligence
services at the time estimated the group had about 100 members in Germany
connected to a wider network of supporters across western Europe.
The court found
that the plot to assassinate Allawi had been hatched only days before the
premier's brief trip to Berlin
in December 2004.
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