The Manila Times

Spain police: suspects planned bigger attack

- AFP PHOTO / MOSSOS D’ESQUADRA AFP PHOTO AFP

BARCELONA: Suspects in Spain’s twin terror attacks had been planning an even bigger assault than the deadly car rampages they carried out, police said Friday (Saturday in Manila), as distressin­g details emerged of families torn apart in the horror.

A 35-year-old Italian was among 14 killed, mowed down in front of his wife and young children in Barcelona when a driver rammed his van through crowds on the busy Las Ramblas boulevard on

“suspected terrorists” who had knocked pedestrian­s down in the Catalan seaside resort of Cambrils in a second attack in the early hours of Friday, and arrested four others as Spain reeled from the deadly violence.

Catalonia’s regional police iden were killed as Moroccan nationals.

They were Moussa Oukabir, 17, Said Aallaa, 18, and Mohamed Hychami, 24.

Police said they suspect 12 people of involvemen­t in the at four who were arrested and three remain at large.

Officials suspect that two of these three may have died in a blast at a house in the town of Alcanar, about 200 kilometers (140 miles) south of Barcelona on Wednesday evening.

Bigger plans

Initially treated as a random gas blast, police later linked the blast to the Barcelona assault, believing occupants of the house were preparing a larger attack, possibly a vehicle bomb, with the use of gas canisters and slipped up.

Police removed dozens of gas canisters from the house, according to an Agence France- Presse photograph­er at the scene.

“They were preparing one or several attacks in Barcelona, and an explosion in Alcanar stopped this as they no longer had the material they needed to commit attacks of an even bigger scope,” said Josep Lluis Trapero of Catalonia’s police.

After the explosion the suspects quickly went on to commit “more rudimentar­y” attacks. These involved the vehicles plowing into pedestrian­s in Barcelona and Cambrils, he added.

The Cambrils suspects had an axe and knives in the car as well as fake explosive belts stuck to their bodies, said police.

High ‘level of coordinati­on’

Both Spanish attacks followed the same modus operandi.

Drivers deliberate­ly targeted pedestrian­s with their vehicles, the latest in a series of such assaults in Europe.

The Mediterran­ean resort of Nice in France was particular­ly hard hit on July 14, 2016, when a man rammed a truck into a crowd, killing 86 people.

Otso Iho of Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Center said the Spanish assaults, which stretched out over two different cities, appeared to be “a much higher level of coordinati­on than has been typically present in previous attacks.”

IS has claimed an attack in Spain.

In a poignant moment Friday,

A combo of handout images released by the Catalan regional police “Mossos D’Esquadra” on Friday shows four suspects of the Barcelona and Cambrils attacks, (from L) Moussa Oukabir, Said Aallaa, Mohamed Hychami and Younes Abouyaaqou­b. Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, King Felipe VI and the president of Catalonia—where both attacks took place— held a minute of silence in Barcelona. It was followed by the crowd applauding and shouting “not afraid”.

But in a sign of the tensions sparked by the attacks, about 20 far-right militants tried to protest at the march. Some held up signs reading “No More Mosques” or “Refugees not welcome anymore.”

Scuffles broke out between the far-right militants and the march participan­ts.

Details started to emerge Friday on the identity of victims, as did tragic stories of families ripped apart.

Witnesses in Barcelona described how the van pushed through the crowd, leaving bodies strewn along the boulevard as people fled for their lives, screaming in panic.

“We were on the city tour bus, we were 20 feet from the accident when it happened,” said Alex Luque, a 19-year-old student from New York.

“We heard the van and the impact with people and then we saw people running.”

Then just eight hours later attackers struck in the early hours of Friday in Cambrils. An Audi A3 car rammed into pedestrian­s, injuring One civilian, a woman, later died of her injuries.

attackers. They also said they had arrested four suspects -- three Moroccans and a Spaniard.

Police said they have not yet that sped into crowds in Barcelona.

There were some three dozen nationalit­ies among the dead and injured, from countries including Algeria, Australia, China, France, Ireland, Peru and Venezuela, according to Spain’s civil protection agency.

The Catalan government said seven victims of the attacks had been an Italian and a Portuguese.

Fifty-nine injured remained in hospital, including 15 who were in critical condition, the Catalan interior ministry said.

People stand next to flowers, candles and other items set up on the Las Ramblas boulevard in Barcelona as they pay tribute to the victims of the Barcelona attack, a day after a van plowed into the crowd, killing 14 persons and injuring over 100.

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