Reporting from the Associated Press pages, these events culminated in three days. Reportedly, residents who had 40 cars were burned in that time. Berlin police did not have any evidence that leads to the perpetrators.
"We really need input from the citizens," said Rainer Wendt, head of the German police union.
Police deployed 100 officers to various areas in Berlin. The police will even provide a prize of 5,000 euros or about Rp61 million for the citizens who helped catch the perpetrators. To date, no known motive for arson.
"The perpetrator may be an individual, or a small group of people. I did not find any political motive behind this incident," police spokesman said the German, Thomas Neuendorf.
The case of the burning car is not the first time occurred in Germany. Previously, in 2010, as many as 54 cars burned an unknown person. In this year the number increased rapidly, ie 135 cars through August only.
Police said most of the burned car is luxury cars in residential areas west of Berlin. among which are three BMWs, three Audi, Ford, Opel and Volkswagen. Uwe Frers, founder of the site 'burning cars in Germany ", said the firing was motivated by envy and social inequality.
"The burning usually occurs in areas such as Kreuzberg, Berlin Mitte or Friedrichshain. The natives do not like the area the settlers rich, so they burn their cars," says Uwe, quoted from the pages of CNN.
However, the German sociologist, Klaus Hurrelmann, said the burning motivation change over time. According to him, the burning time is about to create such a big riot in London, England, some time ago.
"The culprit is probably the young men who tried to start a riot like in London. Burn the car is easy and cheap," said Hurrelmann.


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