Regina Leader-Post

Three questioned after attacks released

- GREG KELLER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PARIS — French police have released three female suspects from questionin­g, but will keep nine other people in custody as part of an anti-terror investigat­ion connected to the Jan. 7 attacks in Paris that have put Europe on high alert, officials said Sunday.

Amid the heightened European vigilance, a far-right rally in Germany planned for Monday was cancelled over a terrorism threat, Italy said it had expelled nine suspected jihadis since late December and Britain’s home secretary called for new action to fight antiSemiti­sm in the wake of the Paris attacks.

Authoritie­s in Belgium, meanwhile, asked Greek counterpar­ts to extradite a man detained in Greece a day earlier in connection with a probe of a suspected plot to kill police in Belgium. On Thursday, Belgian police led a vast anti-terrorism sweep in and around Brussels and in eastern Verviers, which left two suspects dead. Authoritie­s cited an imminent threat.

Police in at least four European countries arrested dozens of suspects last week in an anti-terrorism crackdown sparked by the bloody rampage in and around Paris. Brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi and their friend, Amedy Coulibaly, killed 17 people at the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, a kosher grocery and elsewhere.

In Paris, prosecutor’s office spokesman Denis Fauriat said nine suspects among a total of 12 rounded up on Friday were facing extended interrogat­ions for the next two days, a step allowed under tough French anti-terror laws enacted largely after bombings and other terrorism years ago in France.

The nine — eight men and a woman — were being held in a probe centring on possible logistical support given to Coulibaly. Belgian authoritie­s say there was no apparent link between the foiled plot in Belgium and the terror attacks in Paris.

Fallout from the Paris attacks has spread. Demonstrat­ions in support of the slain Charlie Hebdo journalist­s have been held in countries from the United States to Brazil, and violent protests against the magazine’s depictions of the Prophet Muhammad have taken place in Niger, Pakistan and Algeria — countries with large Muslim population­s.

Niger’s president said Saturday that at least 10 people were killed in violent protests in the West African nation over Charlie Hebdo’s depiction of the Prophet Muhammad. The satirical weekly has long antagonize­d Muslims with its depictions of the Prophet, and its cover cartoon published Wednesday depicted Muhammad holding a “Je Suis Charlie” — I am Charlie — sign.

Europe too was eager to head off any possible violence.

French authoritie­s banned an anti-Islamist demonstrat­ion in Paris planned on Sunday, ruling that it might disrupt public order. In Germany, a rally by a group calling itself PEGIDA, or Patriotic Europeans against the Islamizati­on of the West, was called off because of a terrorist threat against one of its organizers. The group has been holding weekly rallies in the eastern city of Dresden.

Organizers of the banned Paris rally instead held a news conference in a location that was kept secret until a few hours before it began. Renaud Camus, who has tapped into fears about Muslims in Europe, said Pegida represents a “great hope rising in the east.”

 ?? VIRGINIA MAYO/The Associated Press ?? Belgian commandos patrol near a synagogue in Antwerp on Saturday. Security around Belgium has been stepped up after 13
people were detained in an anti-terror sweep.
VIRGINIA MAYO/The Associated Press Belgian commandos patrol near a synagogue in Antwerp on Saturday. Security around Belgium has been stepped up after 13 people were detained in an anti-terror sweep.

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