ITALY/ GERMANY:Italy and Germany experienced fresh concerns about Islamic terrorist activity over the weekend. Three Moroccans accused of running a "terror school" were arrested near Perugia, central Italy, last Saturday.
On the same day Germany's deputy interior minister August Hanning warned that al-Qaeda activists are targeting Germany for attack.
Imam Korchi El Mostapha (41) and two aides, Mohammed El Jari (47) and Driss Safika (46), were arrested in a dawn raid in the village of Ponte Felcino, 7km north of the well-known Umbrian university town, Perugia. Anti-terror police reported they had found evidence of training in explosives and poisons, chemical supplies including cyanide and acids and instructions on how to fly a Boeing 747.
"The evidence has shown that, in the Ponte Felcino mosque, there was sustained training for terrorist activity. We have discovered and neutralised a real "terror school, part of a widespread terrorist system made up of small cells that act on their own", commented anti-terror police chief, Carlo De Stefano.
According to police, activities at the mosque included the storage of potentially dangerous chemicals and the screening of films which contained instructions on bomb making, the detonation of bombs via mobile phone and on how to stage a bomb attack. Police also said that the three men arrested on Saturday had been in contact with the Moroccan Islamic Combat Group, GICM, in Belgium two years ago. GICM is believed to have ties to al-Qaeda and may have had a role in attacks in Casablanca in 2003 and the Madrid train bombings of 2004.
Saturday's arrests were the result of a two-year investigation based in Perugia, a popular tourist destination and home to a prestigious University For Foreigners, where hundreds of international students are enrolled. In a related raid, 20 foreign students were also arrested whilst police have a warrant for another man, believed to have left Italy.
While the Italian interior minister Giuliano Amato welcomed the arrests, adding that it was necessary to pay close attention to mosques being used for activities unrelated to religion, the director of the Cultural Institute of the Islamic Community, Sheikh Abdul Adid Palazzi warned: "This is just the tip of the iceberg in our country - like in the rest of western Europe. Most mosques are controlled by extremist pro-terror organisations - 90 per cent of mosques."
Italian concerns were echoed by German deputy interior minister August Hanning who on Saturday told German daily, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung: "The danger that there could be terrorist attacks here is very real. We have many indications that al -Qaeda is targeting Germany."