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Police with machine guns to secure Berlin New Year fest

By AFP
29 December 2016   |   10:44 am
German authorities are beefing up security for New Year's eve celebrations in Berlin on Saturday after last week's truck attack, deploying police with machine guns and securing the festive zone around the Brandenburg Gate with concrete slabs.
(FILES) This file photo taken on January 1, 2016 shows fireworks exploding behind the quadriga statue of Berlin's Brandenburg Gate to usher in the new year. German authorities are beefing up security for New Year's eve celebrations in Berlin on December 31, 2016 after the truck attack from December 19, 2016, deploying police with machine guns and securing the festive zone around the Brandenburg Gate with concrete slabs. / AFP PHOTO / TOBIAS SCHWARZ

(FILES) This file photo taken on January 1, 2016 shows fireworks exploding behind the quadriga statue of Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate to usher in the new year. German authorities are beefing up security for New Year’s eve celebrations in Berlin on December 31, 2016 after the truck attack from December 19, 2016, deploying police with machine guns and securing the festive zone around the Brandenburg Gate with concrete slabs. / AFP PHOTO / TOBIAS SCHWARZ

German authorities are beefing up security for New Year’s eve celebrations in Berlin on Saturday after last week’s truck attack, deploying police with machine guns and securing the festive zone around the Brandenburg Gate with concrete slabs.

“This year, what’s new is that we will place concrete blocks and position heavy armoured vehicles at the entrances” of the celebration zone, a Berlin police spokesman said.

While the number of police officers deployed will remain close to last year’s figure of around 1,000, this year, “at least some of them will be standing there with machine guns,” he added.

Germany had already put in place heightened security measures during last year’s celebrations, following the November 13 attack in Paris.

Revellers will once again not be allowed to bring in backpacks or large bags.

All forms of pyrotechnics and potentially dangerous objects such as glass bottles will also be banned at this year’s event where hundreds of thousands of people are expected.

Questions surrounding security are high on the agenda after the December 19 attack, when Tunisian national Anis Amri allegedly hijacked a truck and drove it into a Berlin Christmas market, killing 12 people.

Amri, 24, went on the run and was the focus of a four-day manhunt before being shot dead by police in Milan, northern Italy, after opening fire first.

The Berlin rampage was claimed by the Islamic State group, which released a video last Friday in which Amri is shown pledging allegiance to IS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

In the immediate aftermath of the attack, police officers armed with machine guns were seen patrolling the streets in downtown Berlin.

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