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German police launch raids in probe into Berlin blackout

AFP
AFP - news@thelocal.de
German police launch raids in probe into Berlin blackout
Police officers stand in Reichenberger Straße in front of the Kalabalik bookstore. Half a year after a widespread blackout in Berlin, the police have launched a raid against alleged suspects. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Soeren Stache

Police staged raids across Germany on Tuesday as part of a probe into an arson attack last year that knocked out high-voltage power lines and caused a partial blackout in Berlin.

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An unnamed "group of anarchists" claimed responsibility for the outage in a post on the far-left Indymedia online platform, saying they intended to "turn off the energy for the military industrial complex" at a nearby technology park.

The fire took down two high-voltage cables and knocked out electricity to nearly 50,000 customers in Berlin's southeastern Treptow-Koepenick district, according to local grid operator Stromnetz Berlin.

A separate arson attack in southwestern Berlin in early January destroyed a key electricity transmission line and caused a major blackout that lasted for days at a time of freezing temperatures.

A left-wing militant group, Vulkangruppe (Volcano Group), claimed responsibility for that outage, which affected Berlin's Steglitz-Zehlendorf district.

Berlin's mayor, Kai Wegner, said that Tuesday's raids showed that "the investigative pressure on the far-left perpetrators" of both attacks "has been significantly stepped up".

READ ALSO: 'Unworthy' - Berlin mayor caught playing tennis during widespread blackout

German Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt said that authorities "have been monitoring the far-left extremist scene very closely" since both the Berlin blackouts and "are taking consistent action against far-left extremist activities at all levels".

Tuesday morning's raids focused on the September 2025 blackout and four named suspects -- aged 28, 31, 35 and 36 -- in a joint statement from Berlin's police and prosecutors.

A total of 18 locations were searched in Berlin, Hamburg, Düsseldorf and the eastern town of Kyritz, the statement said.

Mobile phones and laptops were among the items seized by police.

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Although both Berlin blackouts have been blamed on far-left activists, German authorities have in the past also pointed to Russia as being behind surveillance and sabotage activities targeting its infrastructure.

READ ALSO: Just how vulnerable is Germany’s infrastructure to attacks and sabotage?

German authorities launched a "terrorism" investigation into the January attack.

They have yet to identify any members of the Vulkangruppe, which has also claimed responsibility for a number of other arson attacks in recent years, or determine conclusively that the group actually exists.

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