The Mercury News Weekend

Spain shared informatio­n about attack cell leader with Belgium

- By Aritz Parra The Associated Press

MADRID » Spanish authoritie­s shared informatio­n with Belgium more than a year ago about the alleged cell leader in last week’s Spain attacks, but didn’t have any details at the time to indicate he was dangerous, officials said Thursday.

Abdelbaki Es Satty, an imam who is blamed for recruiting young Muslims in a Catalan town to commit attacks in Barcelona, had served a four-year prison term for drug traffickin­g in 2012 and had been questioned as early as 2006 in a national police operation against jihadism.

But the Catalan police officer who answered an informal request of informatio­n from Belgium in early 2016 didn’t have the complete records on Es Satty, according to the remarks by high ranking police and government officials in Catalonia and interviews conducted by The Associated Press.

The chief of the Interior department in the Catalan regional government, Joaquim Forn, acknowledg­ed Thursday that Belgian police in Vilvoorde made an informal request for informatio­n on the imam in 2016, when Es Satty spent three months in the city known for Islamic State group recruiting.

Forn said police gave Belgian counterpar­ts what they had but at no point had anyone told them Es Satty had been investigat­ed or was dangerous. The exchange was described by another Catalan official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss an informal conversati­on be- tween two police officers.

Es Satty was one of two suspects that died in a blast at a house in Alcanar on Aug. 16 that disrupted the cell’s plan to set off bombs at high-profile targets in Barcelona.

After the explosion, others in the cell carried out attacks with vehicles and knives as weapons on Aug. 17-18 that left 15 dead and more than 120 injured.

Police confirmed on Thursday the identity of the second body found in the house used as an explosives workshop as that of Youssef Aalla. One suspect survived the blast and has been jailed.

A National Court judge also released Salh El Karib, a suspect held in the wake of the attacks, because of a lack of evidence that the cybercafe worker was part of the plot.

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