<div align="justify">Several people were wounded when shots were fired at a commuter rail station near the southern German city of Munich today and one person was detained, police said.<br /><br />"Several people were injured by shots. A female police officer was badly wounded" at an S-Bahn station in Unterfoehring, a northeastern suburb of the Bavarian city, police tweeted, and that the scene was now "secured".<br /><br />A Munich police spokesman, Marcus da Gloria Martins, later told reporters there was no indication of a "political or religious" motive behind the incident.<br /><br />"The sole male perpetrator was motivated by personal reasons," he said.<br /><br />Martins said that the unidentified man had tried to push at least one police officer in front of an incoming train, leading to a scuffle during which he took the female officer's gun and fired.<br /><br />"The police officer was shot in the head and critically injured," Martins said.<br /><br />Two other people at the station were seriously injured but their lives were not believed to be in danger. They were being treated in local hospitals.<br /><br />"The assailant was arrested. He was also injured. There are no indications of further perpetrators," according to another police tweet.<br /><br />"The area around the suburban train station Unterfoering has been cordoned off."<br /><br />Last July, an 18-year-old, David Ali Sonboly, shot dead nine people at a Munich shopping mall before turning the gun on himself, having spent a year planning the rampage.<br /><br />Police said the German-Iranian teen was "obsessed" with mass murderers such Norwegian right-wing fanatic Anders Behring Breivik and had no links to the Islamic State group.<br /><br />And in March, an axe-wielding attacker wounded nine people in a bloody rampage at a railway station in the western city of Duesseldorf.<br /><br />The 36-year-old Kosovan national had been diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic with a history of high anxiety and self-harm, police said, ruling out a terrorist motive.<br /><br />Instead, they suggested he might have carried out the attack at the station to end his own life.<br /><br />The suspect was taken into custody after jumping off a bridge.<br /><br />German authorities have been on high alert since a series of attacks claimed by IS.<br /><br />The most deadly came last December when a Tunisian rejected asylum seeker rammed a truck into a crowded Berlin Christmas market in an attack that killed 12 people and wounded dozens of others.</div>
<div align="justify">Several people were wounded when shots were fired at a commuter rail station near the southern German city of Munich today and one person was detained, police said.<br /><br />"Several people were injured by shots. A female police officer was badly wounded" at an S-Bahn station in Unterfoehring, a northeastern suburb of the Bavarian city, police tweeted, and that the scene was now "secured".<br /><br />A Munich police spokesman, Marcus da Gloria Martins, later told reporters there was no indication of a "political or religious" motive behind the incident.<br /><br />"The sole male perpetrator was motivated by personal reasons," he said.<br /><br />Martins said that the unidentified man had tried to push at least one police officer in front of an incoming train, leading to a scuffle during which he took the female officer's gun and fired.<br /><br />"The police officer was shot in the head and critically injured," Martins said.<br /><br />Two other people at the station were seriously injured but their lives were not believed to be in danger. They were being treated in local hospitals.<br /><br />"The assailant was arrested. He was also injured. There are no indications of further perpetrators," according to another police tweet.<br /><br />"The area around the suburban train station Unterfoering has been cordoned off."<br /><br />Last July, an 18-year-old, David Ali Sonboly, shot dead nine people at a Munich shopping mall before turning the gun on himself, having spent a year planning the rampage.<br /><br />Police said the German-Iranian teen was "obsessed" with mass murderers such Norwegian right-wing fanatic Anders Behring Breivik and had no links to the Islamic State group.<br /><br />And in March, an axe-wielding attacker wounded nine people in a bloody rampage at a railway station in the western city of Duesseldorf.<br /><br />The 36-year-old Kosovan national had been diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic with a history of high anxiety and self-harm, police said, ruling out a terrorist motive.<br /><br />Instead, they suggested he might have carried out the attack at the station to end his own life.<br /><br />The suspect was taken into custody after jumping off a bridge.<br /><br />German authorities have been on high alert since a series of attacks claimed by IS.<br /><br />The most deadly came last December when a Tunisian rejected asylum seeker rammed a truck into a crowded Berlin Christmas market in an attack that killed 12 people and wounded dozens of others.</div>