26-04-2024 02:30 AM Jerusalem Timing

German Police Arrest Two Algerians ’Linked to ISIL’

German Police Arrest Two Algerians ’Linked to ISIL’

German police Thursday arrested two Algerians suspected of links to the ISIL group and hunted two others after raids targeting several sites including refugee shelters where some of thesuspects lived.

German police Thursday arrested two Algerians suspected of links to the ISIL group (so-called Islamic State in Iraq and Levant) and hunted two others after raids targeting several sites including refugee shelters where some of the suspects lived.

The four "from the jihadist scene are under investigation over suspicions that they are planning a serious act threatening the security of the state", Berlin police said.

The alleged involvement of Algerian nationals in any IS plot as well as a link to refugee shelters is expected to add fuel to a raging debate over the 1.1 million asylum seekers that Germany took in last year.German police

North African migrants were already in the spotlight after they were blamed for a rash of sexual assaults during New Year Eve's festivities in the western German city of Cologne.

But the latest arrests risk compounding fears that jihadists are taking advantage of the massive influx of asylum seekers to Europe to slip inundetected.

The operation came as a huge police deployment was underway in Cologne to avoid a repeat of the New Year rampage during the giant week-long carnival festivities which begin Thursday.

One of the two men captured on Thursday is sought by Algerian authorities for his links to IS, police said, adding that "investigations show that he has been trained militarily in Syria."

The second Algerian was arrested for having falsified identity documents.
A woman was also detained in the course of the raids, although police did not specify the reason.

Some 450 officers took part in the operation sweeping Berlin, and the states of North Rhine-Westphalia and Lower Saxony, and carried away computers and mobile telephones.

Among locations searched were "the refugee shelters where the suspects lived," Berlin police spokesman Stefan Redlich told news channel N24.