Leipzig (Germany) (AFP) --- A Syrian man suspected of plotting an
Islamic State bomb attack was arrested Monday by German police with
the help of three of his compatriots, in a case that sparked fresh
calls for greater checks on asylum seekers.
Jaber Albakr, 22, had narrowly slipped through the police net
Saturday when commandos raided his apartment and found 1.5 kilos of
TATP, the homemade explosive used by jihadists in the Paris and
Brussels attacks last year.
The explosives were "almost ready, or even ready for usage",
said Joerg Michaelis, chief investigator in the eastern state of
Saxony, adding that the suspect was apparently preparing a "bomb,
possibly in the form of a suicide vest".
After a manhunt over the weekend, police finally got their man with
the help of three of Albakr's fellow Syrians, who had detained him in
their apartment in the eastern city of Leipzig.
"A witness came to the police station and said he had recognised
Albakr... and had a photo of Albakr on his mobile phone," said
Michaelis.
"He also said that his flatmates have overpowered Albakr and
tied him up, and that we should come to his apartment."
Police declined to give further details on the Syrian informants for
fear of reprisals against them.
German media reported that the fugitive had approached two Syrians at
the main train station in Leipzig, seeking shelter.
The men had invited Albakr to their apartment, but later realised
that their guest was being sought when police broadcast an appeal for
help in Arabic, the Bild newspaper said.
When police finally stormed the apartment, the officers found one of
the Syrians kneeling on Albakr to hold him down, said Bild.
- 'Bomb-making lab' -
Acting on information from the domestic secret services,
investigators had sought to swoop on Albakr on Saturday in the
eastern town of Chemnitz, about 85 kilometres (50 miles) south of
Leipzig.
But he narrowly evaded police and ran off carrying a backpack, local
media said.
Preliminary investigations suggest that Albakr was probably linked to
the the Islamic State group, investigators said.
"The approach and behaviour of the suspect point to an IS
context," said Michaelis.
Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said the plot "resembles
what we know of the preparations for the attacks in Paris and
Brussels".
Albakr's Syrian flatmate in Chemnitz, named only as Khalil A., was
formally taken into custody Sunday, a day after being detained, as a
suspected co-conspirator.
The 33-year-old accomplice is accused of allowing Albakr "to use
his apartment and for helping to order the necessary material on the
internet in full knowledge of his plans of attack," according to
a statement from the federal prosecutors.
Police on Sunday also raided the Chemnitz home of another suspected
contact of Albakr and took away a man for questioning.
Albakr had entered Germany on February 18, 2015 and two weeks later
filed a request for asylum, which was granted in June that year.
Khalil A. had filed for asylum in December 2015 and was granted
refugee status in March this year.
- Germany on edge -
Germany has been on edge since two IS-claimed attacks in July -- an
axe rampage on a train in Wuerzburg that injured five, and a suicide
bombing in Ansbach in which 15 people were hurt.
The bloodshed has fuelled concerns over Germany's record influx of
nearly 900,000 refugees and migrants in 2015, heightened by a number
of foiled attack plots this year.
Last month police detained three men with forged Syrian passports who
were believed to be a possible IS "sleeper cell" with links
to those behind the November Paris attacks.
They also arrested a 16-year-old Syrian refugee in Cologne on
suspicion he was planning a bomb attack in the name of IS.
German authorities have urged the public not to equate refugees with
"terrorists" but have acknowledged that more jihadists may
have entered the country among the asylum seekers who arrived last
year.
Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative CDU party on Monday called
for greater rights for security services to carry out checks on
asylum seekers.
"We see that the German secret service and federal intelligence
service have no access currently to the main files of applicants,"
said the deputy leader of the CDU's parliamentary group, Michael
Kretschmer.
"That needs to change, we want the German secret services to
have access to these files," he told local broadcaster MDR.
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