March 20
— By Emma Thomasson
BERLIN (Reuters) - German prosecutors said on Thursday they had
detained five people who they suspected were planning an attack in
Germany to coincide with the start of the U.S.-led war against
Iraq.
Federal prosecutors said in a statement they were investigating
the five unnamed persons on suspicion of forming an "Islamist
terrorist association" with the aim of recruiting Arab students and
planning bomb attacks in Germany.
"There are indications that the suspects possibly would use the
beginning of the war in Iraq as an opportunity to carry out an
attack," the statement said. It said this had prompted prosecutors
to raid six buildings in Berlin, including the Al-Nur mosque and
offices of the Islamic Community in Berlin.
The prosecutors said the raids aimed to find evidence on links
between the group's members and on attack plans, and to thwart a
possible strike. Police were questioning the suspects and would then
decide whether to present them to a judge.
Germany warned earlier this month that the country could be a
target for Islamic militant groups such as al Qaeda even though it
opposes the U.S.-led war on Iraq.
Despite its vocal opposition to the war against Iraq, Germany's
center-left government has supported Washington's hunt for Islamic
extremists since the September 11, 2001 attacks on U.S. cities and
has brought a key al Qaeda suspect to trial.
"Militant groups may use war in Iraq as an excuse to carry out
acts of terrorist violence in Germany," federal prosecutor Kay Nehm
told the news magazine Focus earlier this month.
Heinz Fromm, head of Germany's domestic secret service, has said
the vast majority of Germany's three million Muslims were law
abiding, but his organization was keeping an eye on political
extremists within Muslim communities.
HEIGHTENED SECURITY
Germany has been at the center of the investigation into the
September 11 attacks since it was discovered that three of the
suicide hijackers who flew planes into the World Trade Center and
Pentagon had lived in the northern port of Hamburg.
Last month, a Hamburg court sentenced Moroccan Mounir El
Motassadeq to 15 years in prison for aiding the hijackers.
Interior Minister Otto Schily said in a statement earlier on
Thursday that he had ordered heightened security measures in Germany
to coincide with the start to war, with a focus on protecting
American, British, Israeli and Jewish buildings.
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder said in a televised address to the
nation earlier that while police and security forces were on high
alert across Europe in case of possible extremist attacks, "there is
no reason for panic or particular concern in Germany."
"I assure you that the federal and state governments have done
everything to guarantee every imaginable measure of security in
Germany. You can rely on that," he said.
The prosecutors' statement did not name the suspects and said no
more information would be available for the time being.
Earlier this month, a Frankfurt court convicted four Algerians of
conspiracy to murder for planning a foiled bomb attack on a
Christmas market in the French city of Strasbourg in December 2000
and handed them jail sentences of 10 to 12 years.
Last month, German police raided apartments and offices used by
Islamic groups in several western towns and briefly detained four
people on suspicion they were planning attacks, but later released
them without charge.
In separate raids in February, police also questioned three other
men suspected of planning extremist attacks and of supporting the al
Qaeda cell in Hamburg behind September 11.
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