Você está na página 1de 2

German arrests: Key Tunisian

among 16 held in raids on jihadist


suspects

A 36-year-old Tunisian man suspected of recruiting for jihadist group


Islamic State has been detained in multiple raids in Germany.
He was one of 16 people arrested across the central state of Hesse, as 1,100
police searched flats, businesses and mosques.
The man is also wanted by Tunisian authorities over a jihadist attack on the
Bardo Museum in Tunis.
Twenty-one tourists and a Tunisian were killed in March 2015.
Many of the victims were British, Japanese, French, Italian or Colombian.
Authorities in Frankfurt said Wednesday's operation was the result of a fourmonth investigation. They had evidence Islamists were preparing an attack, but
described the planning as in its early stages.
Those arrested are aged between 16 and 46 and are suspected of helping a
foreign terrorist group and of planning serious violence.

Three men were held in separate raids in Berlin late on Tuesday which included
a mosque that Tunisian jihadist Anis Amri visited shortly before driving a heavy
goods lorry into a crowded Christmas market in December, killing 12 people.
One of the three detained was said to be in charge of the Fussilet mosque,
which has been described as a base for radical Muslims in Berlin.

Amri had spent four years in jail in Italy before travelling to Germany but
repeated attempts to send him back to Tunisia had failed because officials
there said he had no documents.

Police said the Tunisian man picked up on Wednesday was detained at his
home in Frankfurt. He had spent 10 years in Germany until 2013 and had
returned as an asylum seeker in August 2015.
Since his return he is suspected of setting up an IS support network.
Tunisian authorities have also linked him to a deadly March 2016 attack on
the town of Ben Guerdane, close to the Libyan border.
He was in detention in Frankfurt facing extradition for several weeks but
was released last November because Tunisian authorities had failed to
submit documents in time.

Você também pode gostar