Suspect in Berlin truck attack has six aliases and is latest in long line of Tunisian jihadis
Anis Amri, who was rejected by Germany as a refugee, spent four years in an Italian prison for arson and was a low-level criminal in Tunisia

The Tunisian now wanted throughout Europe as the prime suspect in the Berlin truck massacre has six aliases, three nationalities — and links to the same brand of Islamic extremism that has drawn at least 6,000 of his countrymen to jihadi networks.
Anis Amri, who was named by German police on Wednesday, is in grim company with other Tunisians claimed by the Islamic State group. One of them includes the man who mowed down 86 Bastille Day revellers in the southern French city of Nice last July and another who gunned down dozens of tourists on a beach in Tunisia.
At least 6,000 Tunisians have left home to join Islamic State extremists, forming the single largest nationality of foreign fighters for the group. Many trained at IS camps in neighbouring Libya. Others made their way to Syria and Iraq.

Amri’s wallet was found inside the cab of the truck, and German authorities on Wednesday issued a warrant for him, listing three different nationalities and six different names and birthdays that he presumably provided.