Syrian arrested in slaying; German mayor urges calm
@jmbacon USA TODAY
Two Syrian nationals linked to terror groups were arrested Thursday in Germany and a third Syrian was arrested on suspicion of murder as Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government continues to juggle its international role as a beacon of hope for immigrants with intense domestic demands to combat terrorism.
In the eastern German city of Cottbus, Mayor Holger Kelch called for calm after a Syrian teen was arrested in connection with the murder of Gerda Kruger, 82.
The suspect arrived in Germany in 2015, but he is a juvenile and so few other details were released by prosecutors in Cottbus, a city of 100,000 people about 75 miles southeast of Berlin, the Berliner Morgenpost reported. No motive was released.
Prosecutor Gernot Bantleon said the maximum penalty for a juvenile would be 10 years.
“We know that the origin of the alleged perpetrator will arouse emotions,” Kelch said on the town’s website after the arrest late Wednesday, adding the “single young man has used hospitality, openness and tolerance in Cottbus in the most brutal and disgraceful way.”
Kruger lived in the city and knew the suspect, police said. A relative found Kruger’s body at her home in December after she failed to appear at a Christmas celebration with former work colleagues. The cause of death was not released.
Kelch stressed that all foreigners living in Cottbus should not be “under general condemnation” because of the crime.
On Thursday, German authorities arrested a Syrian national on war crimes charges linked to the killings of dozens of civilians in Syria in 2013 as a member of the al-Nusra Front terrorist group, prosecutors said. Germany’s DPA news agency said a man identified as Abdalfatah H A, in accordance with German privacy laws, was arrested in Dusseldorf. He was linked to the execution of 36 Syrian government employees.
According to German news magazine Der Spiegel, Abdalfatah H A, 35, came to Germany as an asylum seeker.
Another suspected al-Nusra Front fighter — Abdulrahman A A, 26, charged with membership in a foreign terrorist organization — was arrested in the town of Giessen Al-Nusra was al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria but has at times fought alongside western-backed rebel groups attempting to oust Syrian President Bashar Assad.
Germany has accepted more than a million immigrants, mainly from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, in the past two years. Merkel has been under political siege following a series of terror attacks, including a December incident in which a truck slammed into a Christmas market in Berlin, killing a dozen people.
Syria’s military announced Thursday that its troops, aided by Russian air power, recaptured the ancient city of Palmyra from Islamic militants for the second time in a year.
The statement from the Syrian army said its forces were bolstered by “allied and friendly troops,” a reference to Lebanese Hezbollah fighters, the Associated Press reported.
In Moscow, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russian President Vladimir Putin was informed of the Syrian victory by his defense minister, Russia’s TASS news agency reported.
Syrian troops had seized Palmyra in March 2016 but lost it to the militants in December. The city, which is listed as a World Heritage site by UNESCO, is located 150 miles northeast of Damascus.
Syria’s state news agency SANA said militants’ defenses began crumbling Sunday, and the government reached the town’s outskirts Tuesday. A SANA reporter said troops moved in slowly because of the threat of sniper fire, IEDs and car bombs but were “establishing control over new areas and killing scores of terrorists.”
“We know that the origin of the alleged perpetrator will arouse emotions. (The) single young man has used hospitality, openness and tolerance in the most brutal and disgraceful way.”