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2025 Villach stabbing attack
Mass stabbing in Villach, Austria From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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On 15 February 2025, a mass stabbing occurred in Villach, Carinthia, Austria. A 23-year-old Syrian man allegedly carried out a series of random stabbings against six pedestrians. The attack resulted in the death of a 14-year-old boy and injuries to five other individuals.
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Attack
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The attack took place at 15:33 on the Hauptplatz pedestrian zone, located in the historic city center of Villach. A man began randomly stabbing pedestrians using a knife.[1][2]
The attack was disrupted by the intervention of 42-year-old Allaaeddin Alhalabi,[3] a Syrian food delivery worker, who had seen two of the injured while driving past the scene and proceeded to ram the suspect, standing around three metres away,[4] with his VW car. The suspect was thrown back several metres, losing his knife and being lightly injured.[5][6][7][8] Alhalabi had intended to get out of his car and hold the suspect down, but bystanders began hitting the car, believing it to be another part of the attack. Alhalabi instead drove away and called police.[9][10] Alhalabi's intervention was later credited by police spokesperson Rainer Dionisio as helping to limit the scope of the attack.[11][12]
The suspect got up from the ground shortly after, but did not continue the attack and sat down on a bench instead.[5][6] Police arrived to arrest the suspect seven minutes after the first emergency call was placed.[13] Bystanders, who included a nurse, rendered first aid on some of the injured during this time.[6]
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Victims

14-year-old Alexander Kopeinig was killed[14][15][16] while five other people,[11] aged 15 to 36, all male,[17] were injured.[18] All had been stabbed in the chest and abdomen.[19] Three were treated in intensive care,[20][21] with a 32-year-old released and two 15-year-olds stabilised by 18 February.[22] The eldest of the injured was a Turkish national[23][24] who was first misidentifed as Iraqi.[25][26]
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Suspect
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The detained suspect was 23-year-old Ahmad G., originally from Syria. According to witnesses and responding officers, the suspect shouted "Allahu akbar" and later mocked police who came to apprehend him.[7][27] An image just before the arrest, in which G. is seen laughing and showing a raised index finger (representing Tawhid), was widely shared online.[7][28][29]
In the immediate aftermath, police spokesperson Rainer Dionisio, speaking to Austria's public broadcaster ORF, indicated that investigators had not yet determined if the suspect's motive was Islamic extremism and whether the suspect had acted alone, the latter due to reports of a second attacker.[11][30] A day after the attack at a conference in Villach, the interior minister Gerhard Karner said that the suspect was influenced by an Islamic extremist motive and was linked to the Islamic State, but there were no signs of an accomplice.[30] A search of Ahmad G.'s flat had yielded a self-made Islamic State flag, a written oath of allegiance to ISIS,[31][32][33] as well as a video made the day of the attack, in which he again pledged loyalty to ISIS, saying he intended to be shot by police after the attack.[34] G. had not made direct contact with the terror group itself.[35]
According to G.'s confession, he had intended to kill as many people as possible in the attack.[36] Ahmad G. said he was radicalised through TikTok and YouTube over the course of three months.[35] He was also active on Telegram and streamed several videos containing jihadist propaganda.[37]
Ahmad G. came to Austria at age 18, in either 2019[34] or 2020,[36] after being denied entry into Germany, where other family members lived. In September 2020, Bavarian Police in Traunstein made a personal check on G. while on a train from Salzburg, during which he provided a fake Spanish identification card. Laufen Court sentenced him to a €700 fine, which he didn't pay, leading to a national arrest warrant on illegal entry and forgery charges in February 2021. Also in September 2020, he filed for asylum in Vienna, citing fears of conscription into the Syrian Arab Armed Forces.[36] Ahmad G. received asylum in 2021[34] and held legal residency status in Austria at the time of the attack[11][38] and lived in a flat in Villach with two roommates.[36] He had no prior criminal record in Austria, but on 12 April 2024, he was arrested in German Erfurt for the lapsed fine. He served three days at two jails in Thuringia before being released upon paying the fine.[36][37][39] The weapon used in the attack, a 10-cm foldable pocketknife, had been purchased online three days earlier,[36] which police considered proof that the attack was planned in advance.[17]
Ahmad G. has been held on charges of murder and attempted murder in relation to terrorism, under maximum security at a jail in Klagenfurt,[40] where he remained as of May 2025.[34]
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Aftermath
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On 18 February, a memorial service was held at the Nikolai Church, followed by a memorial march to the Draubrücke, near the square where the stabbings took place. At 18:00 on the same day, the church's bells were rung for four minutes.[41] Villach maintained a week of mourning, which ended with a ceremony at the Draubrücke, near the attack site.[42]
Alladeeddin Alhalabi was widely credited with stopping the attack and gave interviews to ORF, Kronen Zeitung, and various German news agencies.[43] To Kronen, he voiced a fear of retaliation for his actions.[44] Within four days, he received several death threats from radical Islamists via Facebook, following the widespread broadcast of a filmed interview with Reuters through Al Jazeera und Al Arabiya.[9][41] On 20 February, Alhalabi and his family were put under police protection by order of the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution and Counterterrorism, not leaving their house for two weeks, with Alhalabi receiving psychological counselling by the Red Cross.[17][43] In March 2025, he received an honourary gold coin along with a letter by the newly-appointed chancellor Christian Stocker.[9]
Misinformation was spread in relation to the attack, such as a video of an axe attack falsely captioned as depicting the stabbing in Villach and the made-up claim that 17 Syrian nationals were secretly wanted by police in relation to the attack.[45][46] In March 2025, social media users falsely shared that the mother of the sole fatality had died by suicide.[47]
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See also
References
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