World News Rudolph Rodriquez
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Three Syrians were arrested in Germany on suspicion that they are planning a terrorist attack on behalf of the State Islamic attackers with links from Paris, said the German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, quoted by DPA.
“The current state of the federal police investigations indicates links with the attackers in Paris from November 2015,” said Thomas de Maizière.
Evidence gathered during several months of investigation suggests that individuals aged 17, 18 and 26 were brought to Europe by the same traffickers of human beings who were responsible for the arrival of the extremists that killed 130 people in Paris in November 2015, said de Maiziere.
The minister added that there are suspicions that the fake documents used by the three Syrians arrested in northern Germany, as well as those used by attackers in Paris to enter Europe were created in the same workshop.
Three Syrian men, who are suspected to have been sent last year by the State Islamic terrorist network, were arrested on Tuesday following several police raids in northern Germany.
The three are accused of having traveled to Germany to demand Islamic State leaders network “either to perform a mission which they had already received or to prepare for further instructions,” federal prosecutors said. They are suspected of belonging to a foreign terrorist organization.
The three suspects were arrested in Schleswig-Holstein, being identified as Mahir Al-H., (Aged 17 years), Muhammad A. (26 years), and M. Ibrahim (18 years).
They began their journey to Germany via Turkey and Greece and then submitted to the north, which is the route used by the majority of immigrants who arrived in Europe last year.
Federal police also noted that attacks in Paris and Brussels showed that the Islamic State network used the flow of immigrants to send militants to Europe. Authorities have received most of the information from immigrants having ties with terrorists, but most proved to be false. However, there were 60 open investigations into these cases.
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