Gulf Times

Police officer among arrests in far-right terror swoop

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Police in Germany arrested 12 men, including one of its own officers, in a nationwide probe into an extreme-right group suspected of planning attacks on politician­s, asylumseek­ers and Muslims, state interior ministry sources and prosecutor­s said yesterday.

The arrests followed raids, some by heavily-armed special units, which hit 13 locations in six German states.

The four prime suspects planned to spark “a civil-warlike situation ... via as yet undefined attacks on politician­s, asylum-seekers and people of Muslim faith”, federal prosecutor­s said in a statement.

A further eight suspects were alleged to have agreed to “financiall­y support the group, provide it with weapons or take part in future attacks”.

The 12 included a police officer previously suspended over suspicions he had links to the far-right, a source at the interior ministry in North-Rhine Westphalia state told AFP, though it was not immediatel­y clear if he was one of the prime suspects.

From its founding in September 2019, the group’s aim was “to shake the state and social order in Germany and in the end to overturn it”, investigat­ors believe.

In order to plan their attacks, the group allegedly held regular meetings which were co-ordinated and organised by two of the main suspects, named only as Werner S and Tony E.

The suspects, all of whom are German citizens, also communicat­ed using messenger apps.

Investigat­ors launched yesterday’s raids to determine whether the suspects already had weapons or other supplies that could be used in an attack.

The 12 are set to appear before a court this weekend to hear whether they will be remanded.

German authoritie­s have

turned increased attention to the country’s undergroun­d extreme right scene since the murder of conservati­ve local politician Walter Luebcke last June and an October attack on a synagogue in eastern city Halle.

Suspects arrested in both cases have ties to the extreme right.

According to Spiegel magazine, police discovered several weapons in yesterday’s raids, including one self-made “slam gun” similar to the one used in the Halle attack.

Interior Minister Horst Seehofer announced in December 600 new posts across the federal police and domestic security services to track far-right extremist threats, citing a growing danger.

At the time, federal police said they had identified 48 people on the extreme right as “dangerous” individual­s who could carry out an attack.

Reacting to reports of the arrests yesterday, a spokesman for the federal interior ministry said

that measures to protect religious institutio­ns would be reviewed by local authoritie­s.

A spokesman for Chancellor Angela Merkel, meanwhile, said that threats to attack Islamic institutio­ns in Germany amounted to “abominable behaviour”.

“We as the federal government feel an obligation to ensure that anyone in Germany can practice their religion within the bounds of our legal order,” said Steffen Seibert at a government press conference.

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