Berlin - Politicians in Germany warned Saturday of the
dangers posed by Islamists, following the arrest of two terrorist suspects and
a police search for two others.
The arrests took place in Cologne
on Friday when a Somali and a German of Somali descent were escorted off a
plane bound for the Dutch city Amsterdam.
Security sources said the pair had been under observation
for months and were planning to travel via the Netherlands to a training camp for
militants on the Pakistan-Afghan border.
A search of their apartment had turned up letters in which
the two men in the 20s had declared their readiness to die in a jihad or holy
war, the sources said.
Police apparently stepped in to prevent them from joining
their comrades in the Islamic Jihad Union, (IJU), often described as a
successor to the terrorist network al-Qaeda.
German police are currently searching for two other
militants who underwent training in the use of firearms and explosives at an
IJU camp and are now believed to be back in Germany.
Police fear Eric Breininger, a 21-year-old German convert to
Islam, and Houssain al-Malla, a 23-year-old Lebanese, might be planning
terrorist attacks in Germany.
Breininger, who is from Saarland state in the west of the
country, is reported to have recorded an internet video in which he spoke of
carrying out a suicide attack and supported jihad.
The pair were also believed to have been in contact with one
of the three IJU adherents who were arrested in the Sauerland region in
September 2007 on suspicion of plotting attacks against US targets.
Christian Democrat politician Wolfgang Bosbach called
Saturday for tougher laws to deal with people who are schooled in terrorist
training aboard and then return to Germany.
Under current law staying at such camps is not an offence.
"We have to close this loophole," Bossbach said, pointing to the
enormous cost spent on surveillance of the returnees.
Some experts believe there are up to 100 home-grown
militants who have attended training camps aboard and returned to Germany to
recruit new adherents.
Bavarian Interior Minister Joachim Hermann voiced the fear
that the growing number of German converts to Islam could become radicalized.
"Young people who feel marginalized in society are
susceptible to becoming Islamists," the conservative politician said.
"The Breininger case is such an example."
Germany
has so far managed to avoid al-Qaeda-inspired attacks like the Madrid train bombings of March 2004 which left 191 dead
or the suicide attacks on the London
transport system 16 months later, which killed a total of 56 people.
In July 2006, an attempt to blow up two passenger trains in Germany with
suitcase bombs failed because of a fault in the timing device. One of the
perpetrators was jailed for 12 years by a court in Lebanon. Another accused is still
on trial in Germany.
Earlier this week, three teenagers of Turkish descent were
arrested in Cologne
after luring two police officers into an ambush and firing blanks at them.
The trio told prosecutors they planned to steal the
officers' firearms and use them in attacks on Americans and other targets as
part of a holy war for which they were prepared to die.
The group, aged 15-17, had apparently been watching Islamist
hate videos before their assault on the police.
"The jihad has now become a pop phenomenon," the
Tagesspiegel newspaper quoted one security source as saying. Dying as a martyr
in the name of Allah could soon become the ultimate symbol of provocation for
rebellious youth, he added.