[Breaking news update, published at 3:50 p.m. ET]A senior German official says the perpetrator of an apparent deliberate act on Saturday was a German citizen. State Minister for Internal Affairs Herbert Reul told reporters Saturday night that nothing as of now suggests the German driver of the vehicle that plowed through a restaurant's open-air terrace in the German city of
Muenster had a connection with radical Islam, but he said investigators are still looking at the driver's background.
[Previous story, published at 3:40 p.m. ET]A delivery vehicle slammed into a crowd Saturday in an apparently deliberate act in the German city of Muenster, killing two people and leaving 20 others injured, officials said.
The driver also shot and killed himself, a police spokeswoman said. Authorities are treating the incident as an attack, the spokeswoman said.
Police earlier said there were three deaths. Herbert Reul, state minister for internal affairs in the North Rhine-Westphalia state, clarified later Saturday that the total included the attacker.
Muenster police spokesman Andreas Boden told local media that the motive and identity of the driver is unknown.
The attack happened in the old part of the western German city, an area popular on weekends. It was a warm sunny afternoon, one of the first nice days of the spring, and many people were out in the area with its narrow streets, Bild editor Julian Reichelt told CNN.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she is "deeply shocked by the terrible events in Muenster."
In a statement tweeted by German government spokeswoman Ulrike Demmer, Merkel said "everything is now being done to clarify the act and support the victims and their families."
The driver drove a vehicle into a restaurant's open terrace around 3:30 p.m. local time, according to police spokeswoman Vanessa Arlt.
Arlt said the old city remains closed, and police have asked people to avoid the city center.
Muenster, with about 300,000 people, is home to numerous universities and has a student population of about 58,000, the city government says. The city calls itself the cycling capital of
Germany and says about 100,000 residents use a bike daily.
"With dismay, I learned of the terrible incident in Muenster," Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said in a statement, adding, "Police in Muenster and throughout (the state of North Rhine-Westphalia) are now working hard to investigate the matter."
Federal authorities are in close contact with local officials, Seehofer said.
The US Embassy in Berlin also expressed its condolences in a tweet Saturday. "The US Mission in Germany has the victims and their family and friends in our thoughts and prayers," the embassy said.
Saturday's crash occurred on the one-year anniversary of a similar attack in Stockholm, Sweden, when a stolen beer truck struck pedestrians, killing five people.