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August 19, 2006 Saturday Rajab 23, 1427


German govt fears terror attack


WIESBADEN (Germany), Aug 18: German investigators said on Friday they suspected that homemade bombs found on two trains last month were a failed terror attack.

In the wake of the revelation, Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble warned he could not rule out an attack on the German public transport system to rival the bombings in Madrid and London which killed dozens of passengers.

Investigators first thought that the devices packed into cases in trains in the western cities of Dortmund and Koblenz on July 31 were a blackmail attempt, but analysis of the contents revealed a possible link to Lebanon.

“We are now working on the basis that this was the work of a terrorist group based in Germany and that it was an attempt to kill a large number of people,” Rainer Griesbaum, a federal prosecutor, said at a press conference.

The head of the Federal Crime Office, Joerg Ziercke, said the devices were packed into identical black cases and consisted of gas canisters, alarm clocks, wires and batteries and soft drink bottles filled with a flammable liquid.

“The cases had been supposed to explode 10 minutes before the trains arrived at the stations,” Mr Ziercke said.

He said a team of 100 investigators were still trying to find out why the devices failed to explode. “We still have many unanswered questions,” he said.

A note in one of the cases contained Arabic writing and a telephone number in Lebanon and packets of starch with labels in Arabic and English were also found.

The cases containing the bombs were unaccompanied when they were discovered in the trains, but closed circuit television cameras recorded pictures of two dark-haired young men, one wearing a Germany football shirt, wheeling the cases on to platforms at Cologne station.

Investigators have offered a reward of 50,000 euros (64,000 dollars) for information leading to the arrest of the men.

Mr Schaeuble said the discovery proved that Germany must be on its guard against an attempt to cause carnage on trains.

“We cannot judge what the motives of the perpetrators were, but attacks such as in Madrid in 2004 and in London last year cannot be ruled out,” he said.

“Both of the devices were very dangerous. They were supposed to go off and they would have caused death and injury.

“We must take this event very seriously. And we must work on the basis that there is a danger of a recurrence of these attempted attacks.”

He said security measures had been tightened on Germany’s rail network and appealed to passengers for understanding if their luggage was checked by police during journeys.

The video surveillance system in stations is being expanded.—AFP






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