Daily Dispatch

Barcelona mourns victims of attack

Search on for Moroccan man behind carnage

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AGRIEF-STRICKEN Barcelona prepared yesterday to commemorat­e victims of two devastatin­g terror attacks at a mass in the city’s Sagrada Familia church, as police hunted for a Moroccan man believed to be the driver who mowed down sauntering tourists last week.

As investigat­ors scrambled to piece together the two attacks which killed 14 people in all, Interior Minister Juan Ignacio Zoido said the cell behind the carnage, which injured 120 and plunged the country into shock, had been dismantled, although local authoritie­s took a more cautious tone.

Police said they had cast a dragnet for 22-year-old Younes Abouyaaqou­b, who media reports say was the driver of a van that smashed into people on Barcelona’s busy Las Ramblas boulevard on Thursday, killing 13.

An extensive operation including roadblocks was deployed across Catalonia on Saturday afternoon, police said, urging people not to disclose informatio­n about the checkpoint­s.

Two days after the assaults that struck the busy tourist hub and the nearby seaside town of Cambrils, Spaniards put on a defiant front while mourning the victims, with crowds out in force to greet King Felipe and Queen Letizia as they arrived to pay homage to the victims.

Slogans like “Las Ramblas is crying but alive” were seen on shop windows, while a convoy of taxis with “We’re not afraid” plastered on their windows sounded their horns.

“People are coming here like they are seeking comfort from others,” said Sergio Lopez, 36, whose family runs a kiosk on the main tourist thoroughfa­re.

Following a 10am mass at Gaudi’s Sagrada Familia, nearly 100 000 people were expected at Barcelona’s Camp Nou stadium yesterday for their team’s first game of the season, to be marked by a minute of silence for the victims.

Hours after the Barcelona carnage, a similar attack struck in the seaside town of Cambrils early on Friday. Police shot and killed the five attackers in Cambrils, some of whom were wearing fake explosive belts.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, believed to be its first in Spain.

The terror cell in Spain reportedly comprised at least 12 young men, some of them teenagers. Investigat­ors have been homing in on the small town of Ripoll, at the foot of the Pyrenees, where many of the suspects – including Abouyaaqou­b – lived.

On Saturday, police raided the apartment of an imam, Abdelbaki Es Satty, according to his flatmate who gave his name only as Nourddem.

But Spanish daily El Pais, quoting police sources, said the imam might have been one of those killed in an explosion in a home in Alcanar, about 200km south of Barcelona, where the alleged jihadists were believed to have been building bombs.

A waiter at a Ripoll cafe said he had served beers to some of the suspects numerous times, most recently just two days ago.

Most of the suspects are children of Moroccan immigrants, including Ripoll-born Moussa Oukabir, 17, one of five suspects shot dead in the Cambrils attack. His older brother, Driss, is among the four arrested.

Back in Morocco, Moussa and Driss’s father, Said, broke down, surrounded by relatives. “We’re under shock, completely devastated,” he said, adding Moussa had been studying normally at school while Driss worked honestly.

“I hope they will say he’s innocent ... I don’t want to lose my two sons.” Police said they believed the suspects were planning a much larger attack. “They were preparing one or several attacks in Barcelona, and an explosion in Alcanar stopped this as they no longer had the material they needed to commit attacks of an even bigger scope,” said Josep Lluis Trapero of Catalonia’s police.

Security forces were seen removing dozens of gas canisters from the house in Alcanar on Friday.

And as the hunt for Abouyaaqou­b gathered pace, a white van linked to the attacks was found in Spain, said French authoritie­s, who had earlier been warned by their Spanish colleagues that the vehicle may have crossed into France.

Victims of the attack came from three dozen countries including Algeria, Australia, China, France, Ireland, Peru and Venezuela, reflecting Barcelona’s status as Spain’s most popular tourist destinatio­n. Fiftyfour people are still in hospital, including 12 in a critical condition, Catalan emergency services said.

With the peak summer tourism season still in full swing, the Spanish government ordered security ramped up in crowded places, though it had kept the terror threat level at four out of a maximum five, Zoido said. — AFP

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? IN MOURNING: Two people embrace at an impromptu memorial two days after a van crashed into pedestrian­s at Las Ramblas boulevard in Barcelona on Thursday, killing 13 people. Inset: Images released by Spanish police of four Moroccan suspects linked to...
Picture: REUTERS IN MOURNING: Two people embrace at an impromptu memorial two days after a van crashed into pedestrian­s at Las Ramblas boulevard in Barcelona on Thursday, killing 13 people. Inset: Images released by Spanish police of four Moroccan suspects linked to...

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