Boston Herald

Barcelona suspect eludes capture

House explosion link eyed

-

RIPOLL, Spain — A missing imam and a house that exploded days ago became the focus yesterday of the investigat­ion into an extremist cell responsibl­e for two deadly attacks in Barcelona and a nearby resort, as authoritie­s narrowed in on who radicalize­d a group of young men in northeaste­rn Spain.

Investigat­ors searched the home of Abdelbaki Es Satty, an imam who, in June, abruptly quit working at a mosque in the town of Ripoll, the home of the Islamic radicals behind the attacks that killed at least 14 people and wounded over 120 in the past few days. Police were trying to determine whether Es Satty was killed in a botched bomb-making operation Wednesday, the eve of the Barcelona bloodshed.

His former mosque has denounced the deadly attacks and weeping relatives marched into a Ripoll square yesterday, tearfully denying any knowledge of the radical plans of their sons and brothers. At least one of the suspects is still on the run, and his younger brother has disappeare­d, as has the younger brother of one of the five attackers slain Friday by police.

Catalan police said a manhunt was centered on Younes Abouyaaquo­ub, a 22-year-old Moroccan suspected of driving the van that plowed into a packed Barcelona promenade Thursday. Another attack early Friday killed one person and wounded five in the resort of Cambrils.

The Islamic State group has claimed responsibi­lity for both.

Everyone so far known in the cell grew up in Ripoll, a town in the Catalan foothills near the French border 62 miles north of Barcelona. Spanish police searched nine homes in Ripoll, including Es Satty’s, and two buses, and set up a roadblock that checked each car entering the town. Across the Pyrenees, French police carried out extra border checks on people coming in from Spain.

Even with Abouyaaquo­ub at large, Spanish Interior Minister Juan Ignacio Zoido declared the cell “broken” yesterday. In addition to the five killed by police, four were in custody and one or two were killed in the house explosion Wednesday. He said there was no new imminent threat of attack.

Police also conducted a series of controlled explosions yesterday in the town of Alcanar, south of Barcelona, where the attacks were planned in the house that was destroyed by an explosion. Authoritie­s had initially thought it was a gas accident, but took another look after the attacks.

 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? DRAGNET: French police officers, above, check a car at the border crossing between Spain and France yesterday as they search for terror suspect Younes Abouyaaquo­ub.
AP PHOTOS DRAGNET: French police officers, above, check a car at the border crossing between Spain and France yesterday as they search for terror suspect Younes Abouyaaquo­ub.
 ??  ?? YOUNES ABOUYAAQUO­UB
YOUNES ABOUYAAQUO­UB

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States