In early May, a 56-year-old German woman was attacked by an Iranian migrant who suddenly snatched her dog inside a park. As she pursued him, he pushed her to the ground, knelt on her chest, and choked her with her dog’s leash.
The incident, in Glinde, Schleswig-Holstein, nearly ended with a homicide, but the woman’s life was saved by swift intervention of a witness. A police source told Bild newspaper that the woman “had already given up. He wanted to strangle her — and he almost succeeded.”
This disturbing act is linked to a case involving an asylum seeker, raising serious questions about why the man was at large and still in the country.
The suspect, Ali S., is a 32-year-old Iranian. He had his asylum application rejected and was subject to an enforceable deportation order but the police refused to remove him.
The Iranian man has terrorized the town of Glinde
Ali S. entered Germany in 2018 and has a history of police attention. In 2024, he terrorized the Glinde city administration, issuing death threats against employees.
Mayor Rainhard Zug reacted by closing the town hall to pedestrian traffic and hiring private security to control entry during opening hours. In other words, he turned a high-trust society into one that requires private security, just as seen in swimming pools across Germany, which now require private security to ensure riots and sexual assaults do not occur.
Zug concluded that the man is “uncontrollable,” citing employee reports of his sudden and erratic behavioral transformation.
Repeated attempts were made to persuade Ali S. to leave the country voluntarily, and he agreed three times. However, the Ministry of Social Affairs in Schleswig-Holstein confirmed that “all appointments failed, the last one due to a refusal of boarding by the airline.”
Specifically, in early May, the pilot of a scheduled flight to Iran refused to allow Ali S. on board, deeming it too risky.
The ministry stated that “due to his violent behavior, the person concerned would now have to be deported with security escort. Given the situation in the region of Iran, it is necessary for the Federal Police to provide a security escort.”
This requires a new agreement from the ruling government since, as with many countries, Iran does not have a deportation agreement with Germany. In addition, Ali S. does not possess an Iranian passport.
As shown time and again, bureaucracy and “humanitarian” left-wing interference are turning deadly in Europe, with the failure to deport Ali S. directly contributing to an older woman nearly being strangled to death with her own dog leash.
Desperate mayor out of options
Glinde’s Mayor Zug expressed anger and desperation, recounting his extensive efforts to contact the district’s immigration office, the district administrator, state parliament members, and the Ministry of Social Affairs. Despite these communications, the immigration office maintained that “the conditions for deportation are not met,” which Zug found frustrating.
In response to a Bild inquiry, the Stormarn district stated that its social psychiatric service had “multiple contacts with the person concerned over the past 1.5 years. At none of the times of contact were there conditions for admission (to a psychiatric clinic) due to an acute danger to self or others present.”
This statement comes despite the mayor citing specific death threats being issued to city government employees.
Ali S. failed to attend a follow-up appointment after his last unsuccessful attempt to leave the country on May 8. He allegedly committed the attack shortly thereafter. Ali S. is currently in a psychiatric facility.
The public prosecutor’s office has classified the crime as attempted manslaughter, while the court has categorized it as grievous bodily harm. The final legal outcome remains uncertain, but as with many other cases in Germany, the suspect may serve no jail time for his actions, with the courts ruling he is psychologically unfit to be held responsible.
As detailed in the article links provided in this story, cases of migrants “terrorizing” individual towns and cities in Germany is a commonplace occurrence, with some offenders committing dozens and sometimes over 150 offenses, with little consequence and certainly no deportations.
The post Germany: Iranian asylum criminal nearly strangles older woman to death with the victim’s own dog leash, deemed ‘too dangerous’ to be deported appeared first on Remix News.
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