BERLIN — Three Syrian men who entered Germany with a wave of migrants were
arrested Thursday on suspicion of planning an Islamic State attack on the city
of Düsseldorf.
The arrests potentially thwarted a deadly operation that
appeared eerily reminiscent of recent assaults on Brussels and Paris.
The suspected plot, German authorities said, involved
suicide bombers, firearms and explosives — a lethal combination that has become
the hallmark of a new spate of Islamist terrorism in Europe. A fourth Syrian,
who prosecutors said had informed French officials about the alleged plot, was
being held in France.
The arrests highlighted the significant threat to
Europe from Islamic State militants posing as migrants. Officials said all four
Syrians entered the continent from the Middle East using the same irregular
passages by land and sea — Greece via Turkey and then through the Balkans —
used by hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers last year. After the attacks in
Brussels and Paris, Islamic State officials have claimed that more sleeper
cells were incubating in Europe. Thursday’s arrests suggested such threats were
not idle.
The German chief
prosecutor’s office said in a statement that there were no immediate
indications that the men had started taking concrete steps to carry out the
plot. But the authorities moved in on Thursday — arresting the men in three
German states — after details of the alleged plot were provided by the suspect
in France, who first approached authorities in Paris in February.
The plot, officials said, was supposed to involve two
suicide bombers. Other assailants “were supposed to kill as many bystanders as
possible with guns and other explosive devices,” prosecutors said.
Two of the men were suspected of being active members
of the Islamic State, while a third was believed to have at least supported the
group. Investigators also suspect that one of the two Islamic State adherents
had links to the radical Islamist group Jabhat al-Nusra, which is known as the
Syrian affiliate of al-Qaeda.
Revelations that the suspects had entered Germany as
migrants quickly fueled the debate here over the security threat presented by a
massive pool of poorly screened asylum seekers. Hundreds of thousands of
would-be refugees entered Germany last year after receiving only cursory
vetting in near-bankrupt Greece. Over the past six months, more than three
dozen suspected militants impersonating migrants have been arrested or died
while planning or carrying out terrorism. They include at least seven directly
tied to the attacks in Paris and Brussels.
Although a tenuous deal between the European Union and
Turkey has largely blocked new migrants from entering Europe via Greece, more
than a million have already arrived. Only a small fraction, officials say,
present genuine security threats. But on Thursday, critics took aim at a
haphazard migrant policy that was riddled with risk.
Gregor Golland, a Christian Democratic Union member of
the North-Rhine Westphalia state parliament, called local leaders “naive” for
insisting that “no terrorists were coming to Germany via the Balkan route” — a
reference to the main land corridor used by irregular migrants last year.
“Until today, we don’t know the identities of all
refugees living in Germany,” Golland told the Rheinische Post. “The security
authorities in North Rhine-Westphalia must organize an immediate security check
of all refugees living in the country.”
Others called for calm, warning against fanning a
growing strain of anti-refugee sentiment that has led to a surge in attacks by
right-wing extremists on asylum centers and migrants.
“Of course one has to take this very seriously,”
Düsseldorf Mayor Thomas Geisel told the local news website Report-D. “But the
city must not lose its openness to the world — and tolerance.”
A series of coordinated terrorist attacks killed 130
people in Paris in November. The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the
massacre, in which at least eight assailants armed with explosives and
automatic weapons gunned down people at random at several locations in the
French capital.
The Islamic State also claimed a series of attacks in
Belgium in March targeting Brussels Airport and a Metro station. Three suicide
bombings killed 32 people and injured more than 300 as authorities closed in on
suspects wanted in the Paris attacks.
Germany’s chief federal prosecutor identified the
three arrested Syrians as 27-year-old Hamza C., 25-year-old Mahood B. and
31-year-old Abd Arahman A.K. It is customary in Germany to withhold the last
names of suspects who have been arrested.
The men were apprehended in the states of North
Rhine-Westphalia, Brandenburg and Baden-Württemberg. Their apartments were
being searched, officials said.
The Germans acted based on the information provided by
a 25-year-old Syrian identified as Saleh A., who turned himself in to Paris
police in February. His testimony alerted authorities to a German terrorist
cell seeking to orchestrate an attack in the historic town center of
Düsseldorf. The targeted area is known here as “the longest bar in the world”
because of its concentration of beer halls and pubs.
Salah A. and Hamza C., authorities said, joined the
Islamic State in the spring of 2014. Shortly after, in May, the organization’s
leadership gave them fresh orders to carry out an attack in Germany. Two
attackers would each detonate suicide vests on Düsseldorf’s busy central
boulevard, Heinrich-Heine-Allee. Afterward, other attackers would kill
bystanders using weapons and explosives.
With the approval of the Islamic State leadership,
authorities said, Saleh A. and Hamza C. traveled to Turkey in May 2014. From
there, they entered Europe separately. They first came in through Greece and then
used the Balkan route, traversed by hundreds of thousands of migrants last
year, before respectively arriving in Germany in March and July of 2015.
No later than January of this year, authorities
believe, Saleh A. and Hamza C. persuaded Mahood B. to take part in the attack.
The men were later joined by Abd Arahman A.K., another Syrian who had already
traveled to Germany in October 2014, allegedly also on orders of the Islamic
State’s leadership to take part in the attack.
Abd Arahman A.K. had experience building explosive
belts and making grenades in Syria in 2013. Authorities believe that he was
drafted to build suicide belts for the members of the German cell.
Authorities would not say what prompted Saleh A. to
reveal himself to French police. He is still in custody in France, but German
authorities are requesting his extradition.
Thursday’s arrests, officials said, had no connection
with the upcoming European soccer championship in France. Fears have swirled in
European security circles that the month-long event may be targeted by
extremists.
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