Berlin’s Tiergarten murder: How dangerous was the victim really?

The so-called “Tiergarten-murder trial” which is currently taking place before the Berlin Supreme Court is about an alleged contract murder of a “Georgian asylum seeker” in the Small Tiergarten in Berlin on August 23, 2019.

But the “Georgian” is actually the Chechen terrorist Selimchan Changoshvili, his true identity largely concealed or at least played down by the mainstream media in the course of reporting about the Berlin trial.

Changoshvili had joined the armed Islamist gangs of a militia leader and war criminal Shamil Basayev in 2001 and most likely maintained close contacts in the violent Islamist milieu until his death. The Federal Criminal Police Office [BKA in German] classified Changoshvili as an Islamist threat. But he was still allowed to stay in the country. After two years, the BKA suddenly lifted his status as a danger for reasons which has not yet been explained.

The AfD member of the Bundestag Stefan Keuter wanted to know exactly why and asked the federal government how an asylum seeker with such a questionable past could stay freely in Berlin and whether the joint anti-terrorism center (GTAZ) had dealt with Changoshvili.

In response to Keuter’s questions, the Federal Ministry of the Interior Affairs had answered: “The individual Selimchan Ch. (alias Tornike K.) was a topic of a discussion in the context of meetings of different working groups in the Joint Terrorism Defense Center on February 17, March 14, May 10, July 5 and November 8, 2017; on June 6, November 6 and 23, 2018 and on June 27, August 30, September 2, 4 and 26, 2019.”

According to further information from the Ministry, the Federal Criminal Police Office, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution and the Federal Intelligence Service were concerned about Changoshvili.

Keuter commented: “It is no longer understandable how an asylum seeker, whose personal details were discussed 13 times in the Joint Terrorism Defense Center and who was apparently close to Islamist gangs, could move freely in Germany. It is especially unacceptable against the background of Islamist attacks such as the attack on Breitscheidplatz on December 19, 2016.”

https://freewestmedia.com/2021/03/17/berlins-tiergarten-murder-how-dangerous-was-the-victim-really/