Irish Independent

German teenagers arrested for alleged ‘Islamic State’ plot

- JAMES ROTHWELL

German police have detained two teenage boys and two teenage girls on suspicion of planning an Islamic State-style knife and firebomb attack on churches.

Three of the four suspects, all teenagers aged 15 or 16, were arrested in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia and are “strongly suspected of planning an Islamist-motivated terror attack and of having committed to carrying it out”, according to prosecutor­s in Dusseldorf.

The fourth suspect (16) was arrested in Stuttgart on “suspicion that he was preparing a serious crime endangerin­g the state”, prosecutor­s there said.

Bild, a German tabloid, said the group had been planning to attack Christians in churches as well as police officers, adding that they were supporters of Islamic State (IS). They are alleged to have discussed an attack that would have involved knives, Molotov cocktails and potentiall­y guns.

The assault was in an early stage of planning, according to German media reports, which suggested the potential targets were in Dusseldorf, Dortmund and Cologne.

It was not immediatel­y clear if the alleged plot had any links with Isis-K, an offshoot of IS which was behind a massive terrorist attack on a concert hall in Moscow in March.

It comes after German police arrested three people who were planning an attack on Cologne Cathedral on New Year’s Eve.

Bild reported that those suspects were Tajik citizens acting for Isis-K.

Referring to the most recent arrests, a security source told Bild: “This case exemplifie­s the great danger of how quickly young people can be radicalise­d online and then plan attacks. Even those that were not previously on the radar of the security authoritie­s.”

Germany has been on high alert for Islamist or other terrorist attacks since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza on October 7. It has previously suffered IS-inspired attacks, such as a deadly truck rampage through a Berlin Christmas market in December 2016 which killed 12 people.

IS claimed the terror attack at a concert in Crocus City Hall in Moscow on March 22 that killed 137 people. Four suspected gunmen were arrested.

Three days after the attack, Russian president Vladimir Putin told senior officials: “We know that the crime was committed by the hands of radical Islamists, followers of an ideology that the Islamic world itself has been fighting against for centuries.”

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