BERLIN — A member of a German far-right party was stabbed and wounded in the southwestern city of Mannheim, German news agency dpa reported Wednesday, only days after a knife attack killed one police officer and left five other people injured in the same city.
Dpa reported that a candidate with the far-right Alternative for Germany, or AfD, reportedly caught somebody trying to tear down an election poster on Tuesday evening. When he confronted that person, he was attacked with a boxcutter. Dpa reported that the candidate was still in a hospital with non-life-threatening cuts.
The candidate, who was campaigning for Sunday's local elections in the state of Baden-Wuerttemberg, where Mannheim is located, was not identified. The attacker was detained, dpa reported.
The mayor of Mannheim sharply condemned the attack.
"This cowardly act is despicable and cannot be justified by anything,'' Christian Specht said. ''Anyone who attacks election candidates is calling into question our free, equal, universal, direct and secret elections — and therefore the basis of our democracy.''
''The hatred and willingness to use violence that is currently taking hold in our society is intolerable," he added.
Mannheim police said Wednesday that the detained suspect, a 25-year-old man who was not further identified, was later taken to a psychiatric hospital.
''According to the current state of the investigation, there are no concrete indications that the suspect recognized during the attack that the injured person was an AfD politician," investigators said Wednesday, according to dpa.