Spain, Morocco break up 'jihadist cell' preparing attacks: Officials

Spanish and Moroccan authorities have arrested six jihadists who were preparing "large-scale attacks", Spain's interior ministry said on Wednesday.
Image used for representational purpose only
Image used for representational purpose only

MADRID: Security forces in Spain and nearby Morocco have broken up an alleged Islamic State-linked extremist cell whose six members were actively training and planning to conduct violent attacks, authorities said Wednesday.

Five people were detained near the northern Moroccan city of Nador and one in the nearby Spanish enclave of Melilla, the Moroccan Interior Ministry said in a statement. The arrests came weeks after attacks by Spanish extremists with Moroccan links that killed 16 people around Barcelona.

Five of those detained on Wednesday are Moroccan and one is a Spaniard of Moroccan origin, Spain's Interior Ministry said.

The alleged leader of the cell dismantled on Wednesday was a 39-year-old living in Melilla who was arrested while visiting Morocco. He allegedly recruited youngsters at a re-education center where he worked and used Islamic State group propaganda to train them, the ministry said in a statement.

Investigations found that members of the cell planned terrorist operations in Morocco and Spain, holding secret overnight meetings and carrying out training for eventual attacks with knives, the Moroccan Interior Ministry said in a statement.

The ministry said the operation comes amid a growing terrorist threat in both countries, and as IS pushes to multiply operations outside Iraq and Syria.

There was no suggestion of a link with the Barcelona attackers.

Since mid-2015, Spain has arrested 199 people accused of links to extremism.

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