Syrian man arrested over plot to kill German soldiers
Police in the German state of Bavaria have arrested a Syrian migrant for allegedly plotting to stab multiple soldiers to death. The arrest comes as Germany tightens its border security in a crackdown on “Islamist terror groups.”
The 27-year-old was arrested on Thursday and charged with plotting a “serious act of violence endangering the state,” prosecutors in Munich said in a statement to German media on Friday.
The suspect, whom prosecutors described as an “alleged follower of a radical Islamic ideology,” recently acquired two 40cm knives and planned to “attack Bundeswehr soldiers” in the Bavarian city of Hof, where they would be congregating near a military barracks on their lunch break, the statement said.
The Syrian man intended to “kill as many of them as possible” in order to “attract attention and create a feeling of uncertainty among the population,” the statement alleged.
The suspect arrived in Germany as an asylum seeker in 2014, Bavarian Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann told reporters on Friday. Police received a tip-off from someone in his social circle on Wednesday who described him as an unstable drug user, Hermann added.
Germany is home to nearly a million Syrian asylum seekers, the majority of whom arrived after former chancellor Angela Merkel opened the country’s borders in 2015 and announced that no limit would be placed on asylum applications.
After a decade of bombings, stabbings, shootings and truck attacks, Germany is reversing Merkel’s policies. Interior Minister Nancy Faeser announced on Monday that passport controls would be reimposed on the country’s land borders for the next six months in an effort to curb illegal immigration and address threats from “Islamist terror groups” and transnational organized crime.
Faeser’s announcement came less than a month after a Syrian asylum seeker turned himself in to police after stabbing three people to death and injuring another eight in an attack at a ‘Diversity Festival’ in the city of Solingen. The Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) terrorist group claimed responsibility for the attack.
Following the attacks, the anti-immigration Alternative for Germany (AfD) and Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) parties made significant gains in state elections in Thuringia and Saxony. The AfD is currently polling in first place in Brandenburg, where another state election will be held later this month.