http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/eu_germany_terror

 


Suspects were planning bombing


 
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/brand/SIG=11f589428/**http%3A%2F%2Fwww.
ap.org%2Ftermsandconditions> AP

By DAVID MCHUGH, Associated Press David Mchugh, Associated Press - 2 hrs 2
mins ago

KARLSRUHE, Germany - Three suspected al-Qaida members were working on making
a shrapnel-laden bomb in Germany to attack a crowded place such as a bus - a
plot that shows Europe faces an ongoing terror threat, officials said
Saturday.

Law enforcement officials said the trio, arrested Friday after being under
surveillance for months, hadn't picked a specific target, but were
experimenting with explosives and detonators before authorities swooped in.

The suspects include a Moroccan, a German with Moroccan citizenship, and a
German with Iranian citizenship.

The attack was "still in the experimentation stage," anti-terrorism
prosecutor Rainer Griesbaum said at a news conference. Officials decided to
arrest the three in the western cities of Duesseldorf and Bochum after
surveillance indicated they were tinkering with making a detonator and had
explored possible explosive materials - signs they might be close to
carrying out an attack.

One member of the cell was overheard saying he wanted to "do a bus." The
trio had been researching how to pack a bomb with metal objects that they
could set off in a crowded area, officials said. They had also researched
security measures at public buildings, train stations and airports.

The plot was described as part of the effort by al-Qaida's leadership in
Afghanistan since 2010 to carry out an attack in Europe. Late last year,
officials were warning of an attack in Europe, possibly modeled after the
siege by militants from Pakistan in India's financial capital of Mumbai in
November 2008 that killed 166 people.

The instigator of the German conspiracy was said to have received the
assignment to carry out a bombing from a high-ranking al-Qaida member early
last year.

The man described as the main suspect - identified only as Abdeladim El-K.,
a 29-year-old Moroccan citizen - left Germany in early 2010 and trained in
an al-Qaida camp in Waziristan near the Afghan-Pakistan border, and returned
last year to carry out the attack, Griesbaum said.

El-K. had at one time resided in Germany on a student visa but later
returned illegally after abandoning his studies. Officials said they were
not sure how he had re-entered Germany. He appeared before a judge and was
charged with membership in a foreign terrorist organization.

The other two suspects, a 31-year-old with German and Moroccan citizenship
and a 19-year-old with German and Iranian citizenship, were to appear in
court later Saturday.

Officials said the trio had praised Thursday's deadly bomb attack on a cafe
in Marrakesh, Morocco, although they had no known connection to that
incident. Still, German officials feared they might take it as inspiration
to strike.

Germany's top police official said despite successfully disrupting the plot,
the nation remains a possible target of international terrorists.

"We cannot sound the all-clear," said Joerg Ziercke, president of the
federal police.

Ziercke said the timing of the arrests was "a difficult security
calculation," as authorities had to weigh the value of continuing to observe
them against ensuring they did not succeed in carrying out an attack.

Material seized during searches Friday was being tested, but the suspects
had discussed using acetone and hydrogen peroxide as bomb-making materials,
Ziercke said.

Last year, France and Germany increased security after warning of a
heightened threat of terrorist attack, and Germany said at least 70 of its
citizens had gone to terrorist camps to prepare for attacks, and that some
had returned to Germany. In October, the U.S. State Department advised
American citizens living or traveling in Europe to be wary.

 



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