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Investigators in protective suits at the scene in Castrop-Rauxel
Arrests

German police arrest Iranian man in chemical terror attack plot

German security services were tipped off to the suspect by the American FBI.

AN IRANIAN MAN has been arrested in western Germany suspected of preparing an “Islamist attack” using cyanide and ricin, police and prosecutors said today.

The 32-year-old man was “suspected of having prepared a serious act of violence threatening the security of the state by obtaining cyanide and ricin with a view to committing an Islamist attack”, police in Muenster and Recklinghausen, along with the Duesseldorf prosecutor’s office, said in a statement.

Authorities had been given a “serious tip” that had prompted the overnight raid, said Herbert Reul, interior minister for the North Rhine-Westphalia region.

The raids were carried out by agents wearing protective suits against the perceived chemical hazard.

But a search of the man’s residence in the town of Castrop-Rauxel found no evidence of toxic substances, Duesseldorf prosecutor Holger Heming told AFP.

“Our security forces take every suggestion of Islamist terror threats very seriously and act accordingly,” federal Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said in a statement.

The raid was carried out shortly before midnight last night, a spokeswoman for the police said. Another person, thought to be the main suspect’s brother, was also taken into custody during the operation, she added. 

Chemical weapon 

It was not yet clear whether the second man was implicated in the allegations, prosecutor Heming said.

Authorities would “decide at a later point” whether the 32-year-old main suspect would be presented before a judge, police said.

German security services were tipped off to the suspect by the American FBI, according to local media reports.

The main suspect was an Iranian Sunni Muslim and alleged supporter of the Islamic State group (IS), according to a report from Spiegel magazine.

Ricin is a highly toxic substance that is classed as a “chemical weapon” in Germany. Much like cyanide, ricin can be lethal.

In 2018, a Tunisian man and his wife were arrested on suspicion of planning a biological bomb attack in Germany.

The couple, who sympathised with IS, were found in possession of 84 milligrams of ricin in their Cologne apartment. The man was sentenced to 10 years in prison in 2020, while his wife received an eight-year sentence.

Germany has been targeted in recent years by several Islamist attacks, including a 2016 truck attack on a Christmas market that killed 12 people and left dozens injured.

A 13th victim died five years later having suffered serious injuries in the assault.

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