Bangkok Post

MALAYSIA NABS 5 JIHADI SUSPECTS

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s police said on Saturday that they had arrested five people, including a European employed as a teacher, on suspicion of links with militant groups such as the Islamic State and al-Qaeda.

Malaysia is on heightened alert after reports on Friday that 10 Syrians linked to the Islamic State entered neighbouri­ng Thailand in October to attack Russian interests.

Police chief Khalid Abu Bakar said in a statement that four of those arrested were foreign nationals and one was a Malaysian.

The arrests were made between Nov 17 and Dec 1.

Among them was a 44-year-old European who was employed as a temporary teacher in the state of Penang and had links with al-Qaeda and allegedly participat­ed in militant activities in Afghanista­n and Bosnia, the police said.

Three other suspects — a 31-year-old Indonesian man, a Malaysian and a Bangladesh­i — were part of a cell linked to the Islamic State (IS) group and are were tasked with recruiting volunteers to take part in militant activities overseas.

The leader of the cell was the Indonesian who is said to have vowed allegiance to Islamic State leader Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi through Facebook in 2014.

“He, along with the Malaysian national, is suspected of acting as facilitato­r to organise individual­s from Malaysia and some Southeast Asian countries to join the Islamic State in Syria,” said Mr Khalid.

Southeast Asia faces the threat of Islamic State-inspired attacks designed to “glamourise terrorism”, a Malaysian minister said last month, voicing fears of battle-hardened fighters returning from Syria to launch Paris-style attacks.

In September, Malaysian police reported thwarting a plot to detonate bombs in Kuala Lumpur’s vibrant tourist area of Bukit Bintang.

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