German police arrested four people on Wednesday, who were accused of
belonging to a far-right "terror" organisation that acquired explosives
for attacks on Muslims and refugee homes, federal prosecutors said.
The
early-morning swoops in five states occurred with the country already
on edge after authorities last week said they foiled a planned Islamist
attack by a German-Turkish couple armed with a pipe bomb and other
weapons.
They also came amid a rise in attacks
on lodgings for asylum seekers as Germany takes in record numbers of
people fleeing conflicts in the Middle East and Africa.
The raids
turned up "pyrotechnics with large explosive power" that investigators
believe were intended for use in attacks, said the federal prosecutor's
office in the southwestern city of Karlsruhe.
"To what extent the
suspects had set targets or dates for attacks will be the subject of
further investigation," it said in a statement.
The four
suspects, three men and a 22-year-old woman identified only as Denise
Vanessa G., are accused of starting a "far-right terrorist organisation"
called Oldschool Society with a larger group of people last November.
News
website Spiegel Online said the group had an emblem featuring a tank,
Germanic runes popular in the neo-Nazi scene, and two skulls with the
slogan: "One bullet is not enough".
Two of the accused, named as
56-year-old Andreas H. and Markus W., 39, are believed to be the
ringleaders, using the titles "president" and "vice president".
The fourth suspect was listed as 47-year-old Olaf O. All are German citizens, prosecutors said.
"According
to the findings to date, the aim of the organisation was to mount in
smaller groups attacks on well-known Salafists, mosques and hostels for
asylum seekers in Germany," prosecutors said.
In the case last
week, the male suspect captured near Frankfurt had contact with the
ultra-conservative Islamic Salafist community. Investigators believe the
man and his wife had aimed to attack a professional bicycle race in the
area, which was cancelled as a precaution after the arrests.
- Neo-Nazi violence -
The
four far-right suspects were arrested based on warrants issued Tuesday
by a federal judge on charges of founding a terrorist organisation.
About
250 officers from special units of police forces in five states and the
federal police searched the homes of the four accused as well as those
of five other suspects.
The investigation was launched based on
information gleaned by agents from Germany's domestic security watchdog,
the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, the prosecutors
said.
German investigators have been on high alert for violent
far-right groups since it emerged in 2011 that a neo-Nazi cell calling
itself National Socialist Underground allegedly gunned down 10 people,
mainly Turkish immigrants, between 2000 and 2007.
Meanwhile violence against refugee shelters is on the rise.
Two
German non-governmental organisations, Amadeu Antonio Foundation and
Pro Asyl, said in a recent report that 25 such homes have been attacked
since the start of the year including three with firebombings.
Activists
blame the rise in attacks in part on anti-migrant sentiment whipped up
by groups such as the high-profile movement PEGIDA, "Patriotic Europeans
Against the Islamisation of the Occident", which organised a series of
weekly marches that drew thousands of participants and intense media
coverage.
Last year, asylum requests to Germany rose 60 percent
to more than 200,000, leaving many communities scrambling to house the
newcomers in old schools, public buildings, mobile homes and army
barracks.
Overseas Development Minister Gerd Mueller said Tuesday the number could reach up to 400,000 this year."
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