Germany: Suspected IS members detained in anti-terror raids
November 21, 2017Police in four German states carried out early-morning anti-terror raids on Tuesday, detaining several suspected members of the militant "Islamic State" (IS) group.
Read more: Preventing terrorism: What powers do German security forces have?
Six Syrian men aged between 20 and 28-years-old were taken into custody, prosecutors in Frankfurt said in a statement.
Some 500 police officers took part in the raids which searched eight apartments in the cities of Kassel, Hanover, Essen and Leipzig. Authorities also seized laptops, mobile phones and documents during the raids, reported German newspaper Welt.
The men are suspected of "planning an attack with weapons or explosives on a public target in Germany," according to prosecutors. Authorities said that the men had not yet finished preparing their attack, but did not provide further details.
The suspects planned to carry out the attack at a Christmas market in the western city of Essen, sources close to the investigation told local public broadcaster Hessische Rundfunk. Police have not yet confirmed the report.
Read more: EU anti-terror chief: Attacks will 'likely happen again'
Refugees alerted authorities
Four of the suspects entered Germany as asylum-seekers in 2014 while the other two arrived in August and September 2015.
Refugees tipped off investigators about the men, who were reportedly active as IS fighters in Syria, reported Welt, citing sources close to the investigation.
Read more: Germany terrorism prosecution cases soar: report
At the end of October, police detained a Syrian man who was also suspected of preparing an explosives attack in Germany.
Germany was hit by several attacks in 2016, including one in December when a Tunisian man drove a stolen truck into a crowded Christmas market in Berlin, killing 12 people.
Last July, a 27-year-old Syrian refugee detonated an explosive device outside a music festival in the southern German town of Ansbach, killing himself and wounding 15 people.
rs/rt (AP, AFP, dpa)