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Dutch police arrest terror suspects
Special forces overpowered two suspected Islamic extremists Wednesday after a daylong armed standoff, adding to Dutch concerns that global terrorism has spread into their corner of Europe.
Police said five more suspects were detained in two other cities on a day that possible links emerged between the Muslim militant charged with murdering a Dutch filmmaker a week ago and terrorists allegedly involved in attacks and plots in Morocco and Spain.
The bloodshed began when police tried to force their way into a house in the Laak working-class neighborhood at 2:45 a.m. and a booby-trap bomb exploded, seriously injuring an officer, authorities said. Gunshots rang out and a suspect threw a grenade out the front door, witnesses said.
Police said a third suspect was arrested in Amersfoort and four were detained in Amsterdam in related operations.
Ethnic tensions have been high in the Netherlands since the Nov. 2 slaying of filmmaker Theo Van Gogh, who had criticized Islamic fundamentalism.
Six suspects, believed to be members of a radical Islamic terrorist group, are in police custody in connection with the murder, including the alleged killer, 26-year-old Mohammed Bouyeri, who holds dual Dutch and Moroccan citizenship.
The Geneva newspaper Le Temps reported Wednesday that a terrorism suspect jailed in Switzerland, Mohamed Achraf, had telephone contact in September with Bouyeri.
Achraf's alleged group of Spanish-based Islamic extremists is suspected of plotting to bomb the National Court in Madrid, a hub for anti-terror investigations, as well as other targets.
Le Temps also said Achraf wired money from Switzerland to two purported Islamic militants in the Netherlands, Ziani Mahdi and Mourad Yala, who were later arrested on terrorism-related charges in Spain. Yala is believed to have met with Bouyeri several times in Amsterdam, the report said.
The Madrid newspaper El Pais said Tuesday that Spanish and Dutch police suspect Yala and Mahdi of having links with Samir Azzouz, who was arrested in the Netherlands in June for allegedly planning to bomb a major Dutch landmark. Azzouz, in turn, was friends with Bouyeri, according to Dutch officials.
Meanwhile, a Spanish police official said one of the other suspects in Van Gogh's killing was in contact with a Moroccan named Abdelamin Akoudad, who was arrested in Spain in October 2003 at Morocco's request as part of its investigation into bombings in Casablanca that killed 32 people. |
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