Germany is terror threat "powder keg" - top prosecutor
Saturday May 13, 2006 8:13 PM
BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany is sitting on a "powder keg" as radicalised
Islamic migrants, who might be plotting an attack, become harder to
detect or apprehend, the country's chief prosecutor was quoted as
saying on Saturday.
Germany has stepped up security ahead of the World Cup soccer
tournament in June, its biggest sporting event in three decades, and
received strong international support for its plans to neutralise the
risks of terrorism and hooligan violence.
German authorities have been at pains to stress the country has
no intelligence of any specific threats to the soccer tournament, which
will feature teams from 32 countries.
But the country is equally anxious to avoid a repeat of the
security breaches which saw 11 Israeli athletes killed by a Palestinian
terror group at the 1972 Munich Olympics.
Asked in an interview with German daily newspaper Der
Tagesspiegel how dangerous the "Islamist terror" threat was for
Germany, Federal Prosecutor Kay Nehm said:
"Assessing the security situation is not the federal
prosecutor's job. However, I have the impression we're sitting on a
powder keg. The attacks on Madrid and London showed that dissatisfied
migrants living in a country can become radicalised without the threat
they pose being recognised in time."
Nearly 200 people died in an attack on Madrid by Islamist
militants in March 2004, while more than 50 were killed in suicide
bombings on London's transport system last summer.
Nehm, whose office is responsible for investigating suspected
acts of terror against the state, said there was an increasing tendency
for perpetrators to act alone, which made it harder for authorities to
apprehend them.
Germany hosts the World Cup between June 9 and July 9.
The Defence Ministry aims to increase police coverage on the
ground with extra soldiers while NATO has agreed to deploy surveillance
aircraft to monitor the biggest sporting event the country has hosted
since the 1974 World Cup in West Germany.
Germany has not suffered any major militant attacks in recent
years, although a cell including members of the group that carried out
the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States was based in Hamburg.