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German police shut down shopping centre in Essen over ‘concrete indications of attack’

Two suspects arrested as specialist officers search one of Germany’s largest shopping centres

Lizzie Dearden
Saturday 11 March 2017 04:27 EST
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(Reuters)

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Police have shut down a shopping centre in Germany after receiving intelligence over a potential terror attack.

Authorities in Essen said the centre in Limbecker Platz was closed for “security reasons” as searches continued.

“Police have concrete indications of a possible attack," a spokesperson for North Rhine Westphalia Police said.

Dogs begin searching Limbecker Platz shopping mall in Essen, Germany, yesterday
Dogs begin searching Limbecker Platz shopping mall in Essen, Germany, yesterday (Reuters)

“In order to avoid possible danger to visitors, they will not be able to enter the shopping halls or the car park. The current investigation indicates that the threat refers only to the shopping centre.”

The force said investigators were urgently looking into the origin of the attack threat using specialist forces, and a phone number has been set up for concerned residents.

A notice was posted on the Limbecker Platz website asking customers for their understanding as it remained closed for security checks yesterday.

Opened in 2008, it is one of the largest shopping centres in Germany, containing around 200 businesses and visited by more than 50,000 people a day.

Essen Police have arrested two men in connection with the threat – one in his flat in nearby Oberhausen and a second suspect in a web cafe in the city.

Officials said the alert was received on Friday from another, unspecified, security authority and investigations ran through the night.

Oberhausen's Centro shopping centre was also revealed to be a potential target, with officers stationed there as a precaution.

Germany remains on high alert following a series of Isis-inspired terror attacks, including the massacre of 12 people when a lorry was rammed into a Berlin Christmas market in December. Following the large-scale attacks in Paris and Brussels, Isis propaganda has encouraged jihadis to carry out atrocities on “soft targets” like transport hubs that have little security.

The latest security alert in Germany comes days after a man injured seven people with an axe in a rampage at Düsseldorf’s main railway station.

Police said there was no indication of a link to terrorism and described the 36-year-old suspect as mentally ill.

Numerous arrests have been made over suspected terror plots, including an Isis supporter found manufacturing explosives to bomb an airport in Berlin last year.

Germany’s federal prosecutor charged three suspected Isis members with planning a terror attack in Düsseldorf.

Officials said the two of the Syrian men, aged between 25 and 27, investigated smuggling routes to Europe for jihadis in 2014, sending several refugees as tests before journeying along the migrant route themselves in 2015.

They allegedly drew the third suspect into the plot and worked with an Isis bomb maker already deployed to Germany, planning to detonate two suicide bombs in Düsseldorf’s popular Old Town before other militants massacred as many passers-by with guns as possible.

The plan was thwarted after one of the conspirators turned himself into French authorities in February last year.

Security fears have put additional pressure on Angela Merkel as she campaigns for a fourth term as Germany's Chancellor, with anti-immigration parties boosted by concern over her refugee policy.

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