The attack is said to have occurred in an area near the Neuraum club, within the bus terminal complex
Nuevo
Agregar La Derecha Diario en
Compartir:
Two Syrian citizens aged 19 and 21 were arrested in Germany as the alleged perpetrators of the rape of an 18-year-old girl at a nightclub in Munich. The attack reportedly occurred in the early hours of June 7 in Maxvorstadt, the university district of the capital. Both suspects were placed in preventive detention by court order.
According to the investigation, the two young men allegedly convinced the victim to accompany them to a nearby area under the pretext of going out to smoke and assaulted her. The young woman was temporarily separated from her group of friends, a circumstance that the accused allegedly took advantage of to lead her to a secluded space within the same complex where the club is located.
The university neighborhood of Maxvorstadt
The assault reportedly took place around 3 a.m. in a room located in the basement of the Central Bus Station on Arnulf Street, where the Neuraum nightclub, one of the city's most well-known nightlife venues, is situated. According to the reconstruction cited by German media, the suspects allegedly surrounded the victim and sexually assaulted her.
After the attack, both young men left the area. A friend of the victim immediately alerted the police, who deployed an operation to identify and locate the alleged attackers. An employee of the nightclub assisted the officers in reviewing the security cameras and provided key information to reconstruct what happened.
The two suspects were found shortly after near the scene of the incident and were arrested. The Forensic Police inspected the scene, collected possible evidence, and seized the accused's cell phones.
Muslim immigration in Munich
At the request of the Munich I Prosecutor's Office, both were brought before an investigating judge, who ordered their preventive detention while the investigation progresses. Authorities confirmed that the detainees are Syrian citizens, although they did not disclose their administrative status in Germany.
The case once again impacts the European public debate on security, migration control, and women's protection, in a continent where progressive political leadership faces increasing scrutiny over the deterioration of public order.