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German police detain Iranian suspected of chemical attack plot

“The suspect is suspected of having prepared a serious act of violence endangering the state,” authorities in western Germany said Sunday.
Image: GERMANY-IRAN-CRIME
The house in the German city of Castrop-Rauxel where police arrested the Iranian man. INA FASSBENDER / AFP - Getty Images
/ Source: Reuters

German police have taken into custody a 32-year-old Iranian citizen suspected of having procured deadly poisons cyanide and ricin to commit an “Islamist-motivated” attack, authorities in western Germany said on Sunday.

The residence of the suspect in the city of Castrop-Rauxel was searched as part of the investigation, according to a joint press release from the Düsseldorf public prosecutor’s office and police in the cities of Recklinghausen and Müenster.

“The suspect is suspected of having prepared a serious act of violence endangering the state by allegedly procuring cyanide and ricin to commit an Islamist-motivated attack,” the statement said.

That, police said, carries a prison sentence of six months to 10 years.

Police seized electronic storage devices but found neither cyanide nor ricin during the search, Holger Heming of the Düsseldorf public prosecutor’s office told Reuters TV.

Castrop-Rauxel is in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany’s most populous state, whose interior minister, Herbert Reul, said: “We had a serious tip-off that prompted the police to intervene during the night. The authorities are now investigating at full speed.”

Heming said the tip came from a security agency of a “friendly state,” without elaborating. Mass tabloid Bild said the agency in question was the FBI.

Police said a second person was detained as part of the searches, adding a decision on whether to issue an official arrest warrant would be made later as the investigation is continuing.

Heming confirmed the person to be the suspect’s brother.

Ricin, found naturally in castor beans, can cause death within 36 to 72 hours from exposure to an amount as small as a pinhead. No known antidote exists.

According to German domestic intelligence services, the number of members or supporters of Islamist causes has shrunk by 1.5% to 28,290 people in 2021, citing the “military breakup” of the militant Islamic State group.

On Dec. 19, 2016, Anis Amri, a failed Tunisian asylum-seeker with Islamist links, drove a truck into a crowded western Berlin Christmas market, killing 11 people and injuring dozens.

News about Sunday’s searches also comes a month after German authorities arrested 25 members and supporters of a far-right group that the prosecutor’s office said was preparing a violent overthrow of the state.