BERLIN (AP) - German authorities arrested 11 people Friday during a series of raids on a group of people suspected of planning an Islamic extremist attack using a vehicle and firearms.
Frankfurt prosecutors said the aim of the alleged plot was “to kill as many ’infidels’ as possible,” news agency dpa reported.
The main suspects are two 31-year-old brothers from Wiesbaden and a 21-year-old man from Offenbach, near Frankfurt, all of them German citizens. The group under investigation - aged between 20 and 42, and from Frankfurt, Offenbach, Mainz and Wiesbaden - is suspected of offenses including terror financing and conspiracy to commit a crime.
It wasn’t immediately clear how concrete the attack plan was.
Hesse state’s interior minister, Peter Beuth, said “police intervened in a timely manner to prevent possible attack plans at an early stage.”
The suspects are believed to have hired a large vehicle, contacted weapons dealers and collected money.
Investigators seized more than 20,000 euros ($22,780) in cash, several knives, small quantities of drugs and documents in the raids in the area around Frankfurt.
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