The National - News

Second arrest by Dutch police after Spain tip-off

- DAMIEN McILROY London

Dutch police arrested a second suspect yesterday near Rotterdam while conducting a major terror investigat­ion after a tipoff from Spain.

A 22-year-old man was held in a raid on a private home just hours after a concert by a US rock band was cancelled on police orders. Officials would not say if the Spanish warning was related to the Barcelona attacks that killed 15 last week.

The Barcelona terrorist cell with links to ISIL is known to have had contacts with extremists in France and possibly Belgium.

Frank Paauw, a police chief in Rotterdam, said the arrest of a man suspected of being “involved in the preparatio­n of a terrorist attack” meant the specific alert that forced the shutdown of the concert was over.

“There is no threat because we have arrested a suspect and the informatio­n about the threat was so specific on the location of the event that with that arrest we can conclude that the threat is gone,” he said.

Police squads discovered a hand grenade near the venue. More than 900 ticket holders were sent home after the performanc­e was cancelled.

The discovery of a van packed with household gas canisters appears to have triggered concerns about a plot similar to the one under investigat­ion in Spain, as the van had Spanish plates and was driven by a Spanish national and there were a couple of gas bottles.

The Dutch police later said that while the van had aroused suspicion, the driver was inebriated and presented no assessed threat when questioned.

The government of Catalonia, meanwhile, admitted it had received a warning about one of the Barcelona plotters, Abdelbaki Es Satty, who died in an explosion in a house the day before the attack in the city. The warning came from a Dutch-speaking town in Belgium.

“The imam of Diegem asked about the man who had moved to Vilvoorde,” Hans Bonte, the mayor of Vilvoorde in Belgium, told the Spanish newspaper, El Pais. “He said he acted strangely and told him he had left Spain because he had no future there and had proclaimed himself imam, although he had no accreditat­ion.”

No action was taken by the Catalonia authoritie­s to follow up on the informatio­n.

In Rotterdam, the California­n band that was due to play the concert thanked the police for a smooth evacuation of the venue. Its members have spoken in the past about receiving threats related to the band’s name, Allah-Las.

“We get emails from Muslims, here in the US and around the world, saying they are offended, but that absolutely was not our intention,” lead singer Miles Michaud said last year. “We email back and explain why we chose the name, and mainly they understand.”

The incident came months after a Dutch man, who was known to authoritie­s as being possibly radicalise­d, was arrested filming outside one of the country’s largest stadiums during a concert.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates