
by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Europe Bureau Chief
MUNICH, GERMANY (Worthy News) – The German city of Munich was rocked early Wednesday by explosions, gunfire, and a deadly fire in its northern quarter, prompting fears of a link to Oktoberfest, the world’s largest beer festival.
Police said a male body with gunshot wounds was discovered near Lake Lerchenauer.
Local media reported the man had booby-trapped and set fire to his parents’ home before apparently taking his own life. A burned-out bus was also found at the scene.
Bomb disposal experts were deployed amid fears of further explosives. Nearby schools were closed in Munich, the capital of Bavaria, and seen as an important political center for the southeastern state and Germany as a whole.
Authorities confirmed they are “investigating in all directions,” including possible links to the Oktoberfest grounds, known as the Wiesn. The city announced that the festival would remain closed until at least 5 p.m. after a letter left behind by the suspect was discovered. Officials said the note is being taken seriously.
SECURITY RESPONSE
Despite the massive security response, police later stressed that there is “no ongoing danger to the wider public,” according to a published statement.
The incident comes in a city still reeling from recent attacks.
On February 13, 2025, an Afghan national drove a car into a crowd in Munich, injuring at least 36 people, several of them seriously, authorities said.
German prosecutors explained that the suspect confessed, and the case is being treated as a murder attempt.
The suspected attack came hours before international leaders, including U.S. Vice President JD Vance and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, were due to arrive in Munich for the Munich Security Conference to discuss global threats.
OKTOBERFEST CHAOS
Fast forward, security concerns remained halfway through Oktoberfest, which runs this year from September 20 to October 5, with questions over crowd control mounting.
On Saturday, the entrances to the festival grounds were closed for about 30 minutes due to overcrowding.
A loudspeaker announcement urged visitors to leave the festival grounds without explanation, sparking confusion. Some visitors described the scene as terrifying.
“It was close to mass panic,” one woman wrote on social media platform Instagram, saying she feared being “trampled to death and knocked over.”
Another festivalgoer called the situation “extremely dangerous,” with people screaming and crying.
HEIGHTENED TENSIONS
Participants reported bottlenecks and gridlocked exits.
Videos shared on platform TikTok showed festivalgoers stuck in dense crowds, unable to move in any direction.
The combination of explosions, the car-ramming attack earlier this year, and mounting security and crowd-control concerns at Oktoberfest have left Munich residents and visitors on edge.
Authorities say the homicide division, counterterrorism units, and bomb disposal experts remain active on the ground, with further announcements expected later Wednesday.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
Latest News from Worthy News
A Christian pastor detained in Nicaragua since July 2025 has been released from prison but placed under house arrest along with five other Christian believers, Worthy News established on Thursday.
An injured Christian pastor in eastern India says recalling Bible verses gave him strength to survive hours of brutal abuse by a Hindu mob that accused him of converting Hindus to Christianity.
U.S. forces carried out five sets of precision strikes against Islamic State targets across Syria between Jan. 27 and Feb. 2, the U.S. military’s U.S. Central Command announced Wednesday.
U.S. forces carried out five sets of precision strikes against Islamic State targets across Syria between Jan. 27 and Feb. 2, the U.S. military’s U.S. Central Command announced Wednesday.
U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff announced on Feb. 5 that Ukraine and Russia have agreed to exchange 314 prisoners, marking the first such swap in five months and the most tangible outcome yet from U.S.-brokered talks held in Abu Dhabi. The exchange followed multiple days of trilateral negotiations involving delegations from Washington, Kyiv, and Moscow.
The Supreme Court of the United States on Wednesday declined to take up a legal challenge to California’s newly drawn congressional map, allowing the state to proceed with district lines that effectively eliminate five Republican-held U.S. House seats.
President Donald Trump said Thursday that Iran has entered negotiations with the United States because it fears potential military action, as both sides prepare for high-stakes talks expected to take place in Oman. Speaking at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, Trump said Tehran “doesn’t want us to hit them,” adding that a U.S. naval fleet is in the region as pressure increases.