Two men arrested in Berlin police terror raids
Police arrested two men after raids at two Berlin locations on Thursday afternoon after tip-offs about known Islamists believed to pose a threat of violence.
Berlin police tweeted at 5:20pm that they had arrested two men in the Britz district south of the city centre.
Info 3/5: Im Zusammenhang mit dieser Gefährdung wurden zwei Männer in #Britz #Neukölln festgenommen.
— Polizei Berlin (@polizeiberlin) November 26, 2015
Police had earlier told The Local that officers on the scene had been investigating a car belonging to one of the suspects which contained a suspicious object.
Local residents were evacuated to a distance of 300 metres, Berlin daily Der Tagesspiegel reported.
Officers also searched an Islamic centre in Sophie-Charlotten-Straße in the western district of Charlottenburg, a police spokesman told The Local, but no weapons or dangerous items had been found by the time the raid ended.
#razzia in islamischen kulturverein in #Berlin charlottenburg pic.twitter.com/8BlCbEScCP
— Thomas Kieschnick (@tomSkie11) November 26, 2015
Police also tweeted they were still searching the building with sniffer dogs trained to find explosives.
Info 2/5: Gefährliche Gegenstände wurden nicht gefunden. Derzeit überprüfen wir das Objekt nochmals mit Sprengstoffspürhunden.
— Polizei Berlin (@polizeiberlin) November 26, 2015
Police said that they launched the raids after receiving clues from members of the public about a "dangerous situation" - but insisted there was no evidence of a plan to attack the German capital.
Security sources told Der Tagesspiegel on Thursday evening that Islamists may have planned an attack outside Berlin in a western German state.
It is not yet known whether there was any connection the Paris terror attacks two weeks ago.
The mosque raided was one of the same ones raided by police in September.
Tip-offs on the rise
Police said that the raids were conducted by members of the city SEK (SWAT), but were unable to confirm reports from Bild that Germany's elite anti-terrorist police unit GSG-9 were involved.
There has been an increasing number of tip-offs to the police in the wake of the terrorist attacks in Paris on November 13th.
Comments
See Also
Berlin police tweeted at 5:20pm that they had arrested two men in the Britz district south of the city centre.
Info 3/5: Im Zusammenhang mit dieser Gefährdung wurden zwei Männer in #Britz #Neukölln festgenommen.
— Polizei Berlin (@polizeiberlin) November 26, 2015
Police had earlier told The Local that officers on the scene had been investigating a car belonging to one of the suspects which contained a suspicious object.
Local residents were evacuated to a distance of 300 metres, Berlin daily Der Tagesspiegel reported.
Officers also searched an Islamic centre in Sophie-Charlotten-Straße in the western district of Charlottenburg, a police spokesman told The Local, but no weapons or dangerous items had been found by the time the raid ended.
#razzia in islamischen kulturverein in #Berlin charlottenburg pic.twitter.com/8BlCbEScCP
— Thomas Kieschnick (@tomSkie11) November 26, 2015
Police also tweeted they were still searching the building with sniffer dogs trained to find explosives.
Info 2/5: Gefährliche Gegenstände wurden nicht gefunden. Derzeit überprüfen wir das Objekt nochmals mit Sprengstoffspürhunden.
— Polizei Berlin (@polizeiberlin) November 26, 2015
Police said that they launched the raids after receiving clues from members of the public about a "dangerous situation" - but insisted there was no evidence of a plan to attack the German capital.
Security sources told Der Tagesspiegel on Thursday evening that Islamists may have planned an attack outside Berlin in a western German state.
It is not yet known whether there was any connection the Paris terror attacks two weeks ago.
The mosque raided was one of the same ones raided by police in September.
Tip-offs on the rise
Police said that the raids were conducted by members of the city SEK (SWAT), but were unable to confirm reports from Bild that Germany's elite anti-terrorist police unit GSG-9 were involved.
There has been an increasing number of tip-offs to the police in the wake of the terrorist attacks in Paris on November 13th.
Join the conversation in our comments section below. Share your own views and experience and if you have a question or suggestion for our journalists then email us at [email protected].
Please keep comments civil, constructive and on topic – and make sure to read our terms of use before getting involved.
Please log in here to leave a comment.