Daily Mail

Far-Right terror plot smashed

- By Rebecca Camber and Larisa Brown

POLICE smashed an alleged Christchur­ch-inspired Right-wing terror plot on the eve of the General Election, it emerged last night.

Officers from Scotland Yard’s counterter­rorism command swooped in a dawn raid on an address in Luton on Wednesday and arrested a Polish man suspected of plotting an atrocity.

He is said to have been inspired by the gun rampage on two mosques in Christchur­ch, New Zealand, in March.

Brenton Tarrant faces trial next year accused of live streaming himself on Facebook while he shot dead 51 people during the mosques’ Friday prayers.

Yesterday sources said the attack on

March 15 had influenced an alleged extreme Right-wing plot in the UK, which was said to be in its infancy when it was foiled by police on Wednesday.

Last night officers were still questionin­g a 25-year-old man arrested on suspicion of being involved in terrorism.

It is understood that no targets had yet been identified, and there is no suggestion it was related to the election or festive activities such as Christmas markets.

However, the timing of the arrest suggests that police and the security services were taking a safety first approach to eliminate the possibilit­y that the suspect could act to disrupt yesterday’s voting. Scotland Yard said: ‘Police are searching two addresses in Luton in connection with the investigat­ion. There is no immediate risk to the public.’

Police have described the rise of the FARRIGHT as the fastest-growing terrorist threat in the UK.

The emergence of a terrorist plot so close to Christmas will raise concern about the decision to downgrade the threat level from severe to substantia­l for the first time in five years.

Home Secretary Priti Patel announced the decision, by the Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre, at the start of November. The ‘substantia­l’ threat level continues to indicate that an attack might ‘occur without further warning’, she said.

On November 29, convicted terrorist Usman Khan, 28, went on a stabbing spree, fatally wounding two Cambridge University graduates and injuring several other people on London Bridge.

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