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After the attack in Magdeburg, which left five people dead and more than 200 injured, Federal Interior Minister Nancy Faeser (SPD) has called for new laws on internal security to be passed quickly. In an interview with SPIEGEL magazine published on Sunday evening, Faeser mentioned the new Federal Police Act, which is intended to strengthen the federal police, or the "biometric recognition of faces and voices of terror suspects, murderers and rapists, which was stopped by the Union in the Bundesrat". Other top politicians warned against hasty conclusions and symbolic politics. "Our job is to support the victims and their families. A competition to outdo each other for symbolic measures would be bad. That would not do justice to the terrible situation," FDP General Secretary Marco Buschmann told SPIEGEL. SPD General Secretary Matthias Miersch also called for prudence: "Instrumentalization or hasty conclusions help no one and only divide our society," he told SPIEGEL. "Instead, after the evaluation, we should draw the necessary lessons - both for the security architecture and for social cohesion." In a video message, Green Party candidate for chancellor Robert Habeck called on people not to "let themselves be infected by hate." Right-wing groups had already called for demonstrations shortly after the attack. More information on the topic: https://www.tagesschau.de/inland/inne... All current information and tagesschau24 in the live stream: https://www.tagesschau.de/ All programs, live streams, documentaries and reports also in the ARD media library: https://www.ardmediathek.de/tagesschau