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This Article is From Oct 10, 2016

Germany Captures Syrian Refugee Suspected Of Planning Bomb Attack

Germany Captures Syrian Refugee Suspected Of Planning Bomb Attack
Police had been looking for the 22-year-old Syrian migrant since Saturday.
Berlin: A Syrian man who came to Germany during a migrant influx last year was arrested today after a weekend manhunt on suspicion of planning a bomb attack, Saxony state police said.

Police had been looking for 22-year-old Jaber Albakr since he evaded them during a raid on Saturday on an apartment in the eastern German city of Chemnitz, where they found several hundred grammes of explosive.

"Tired but overjoyed: we captured the terror suspect last night in Leipzig," Saxony state police said on Twitter, adding that they seized Albakr after acting on a tip-off that other Syrians were holding him at an apartment in Leipzig.

"Leipzig police immediately went to the identified place and took Albakr," they said. A nationwide and international search for the Syrian was then called off.

Der Spiegel magazine's website, without citing a source, said Albakr had approached another Syrian at the railway station in the eastern city of Leipzig and asked if he could sleep at his home. The man agreed and later called police, who arrested Albakr at the home at 12.42 am today.

Albakr had arrived in Germany last year and won recognition as a refugee from his homeland's civil war, police said.

A spokesman for the Federal Prosecutor's Office told broadcaster SWR on Sunday: "The overall picture of the investigation, in particular the amount of explosive found, suggests that the person was planning to carry out an Islamist-motivated attack."

That will prove unwelcome news for Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose conservatives have lost support to the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party over her open-door policy towards refugees and migrants.

Stephan Mayer, a senior lawmaker with Merkel's Bavarian allies, the Christian Social Union (CSU), said Germany's security agencies needed to be consulted more intensively in the authorities' handling of refugees.

"Germany is in the crosshairs of Islamist terror, just like France, Belgium or Britain," Mayer told television station n-tv. "The threat is still high, though there are no concrete indications of planned attacks. We must be very careful."

Merkel said last month she wished she could "turn back the time by many, many years" to have better prepared for last year's influx of almost 1 million migrants.

She has yet to say whether she will seek a fourth term as chancellor in elections next year.

In July, ISIS claimed responsibility for two attacks in the western German state of Bavaria - one a train near Wuerzburg and the other at a music festival in Ansbach that wounded 20 people.

Western Europe has suffered several major ISIS attacks since early last year, prompting a tightening of public security measures across the continent.

ISIS gunmen killed 147 people in Paris in January and November last year, a gunman drove a truck into Bastille Day revellers in the French Riviera city of Nice in July, killing 86, and suicide bombers killed 32 people in Brussels in March.
© Thomson Reuters 2016

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