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Berlin: A Syrian migrant who arrived in Germany two years ago has been arrested on suspicion of seeking funds from Islamic State to drive truck bombs into a crowd, a German state prosecutor's office said on Monday.
The arrest follows an attack two weeks ago when a Tunisian whose asylum request had been rejected rammed a truck into a Berlin Christmas market, killing 12 people. The man, Anis Amri, 24, was later shot dead by Italian police.
Tunisian security forces arrest three suspected militants after uncovering their links to Anis Amri, the prime suspect in the Berlin Christmas market attack.
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Tunisian security forces arrest three suspected militants after uncovering their links to Anis Amri, the prime suspect in the Berlin Christmas market attack.
In the latest case, the prosecutor in the western city of Saarbruecken said the 38-year-old Syrian was detained on Saturday and a formal arrest warrant was issued on Sunday on suspicion that he was trying to raise âĴ180,000 euros ($262,000) to fund an attack.
Prosecutor Christoph Rebmann said the man, whom he did not name, was suspected of seeking the money from IS in Syria to buy trucks and load 400-500 kg of explosives into each of them.
"He is suspected of ... requesting âĴ180,000Â from a contact person in Syria on his cell phone from Saarbruecken in December, 2016 so that he could acquire vehicles to pack with explosives and drive them into a crowd," Rebmann said in a statement.
The man has admitted making contact with Islamic State, which is also know as ISIS, or ISIL, but denied he had any plans to stage an attack.
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"He said he wanted the money from ISIS to support his family back in Syria," Rebmann said, adding that the Syrian had said he wanted to fool the jihadist group into sending him the money.
The suspect is from the city of Raqqa, Islamic State's main stronghold in Syria. The prosecutor's office in Saarbruecken, near the French border, had been alerted to his activities by the BKA federal crime office.
Visitors walk past a makeshift memorial at the reopened Breitscheidplatz Christmas market in Berlin after a truck killed 12 people and injured dozens on December 22. Photo: Getty Images
He came to Germany on December 5, 2014, just before a wave of more than 1.1 million asylum-seekers arrived from the Middle East, Africa and Asia in 2015. He was given permission to stay in Germany on January 12, 2015.
The trailer of a truck, left, stands beside destroyed Christmas market huts in Berlin, the day after the truck ran into a crowded Christmas market. Photo: AP
Chancellor Angela Merkel, who made the now-controversial decision to open the country's borders to refugees in September, 2015, has described Islamist terrorism as the greatest test facing Germany.
She has also said she is sickened by the prospect that refugees Germany has tried to help could mount attacks.
Heavily-armed police walk through the reopened Breitscheidplatz Christmas market. Photo: Getty Images
Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said that failed asylum seekers who are regarded as a danger should be detained until they can be deported. He made the suggestion in a guest column in Tuesday's edition of the Frankfurter Allgemeine newspaper.
Political analysts, conservative allies and diplomats have said a major attack could damage Merkel's hopes of winning a fourth term in September's election. The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has blamed her policies for the December 19 Berlin attack.
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