Spain, Germany arrest 11 said linked with terror groups

MADRID -- Eight people have been arrested in Spain and another three in Germany over suspected links with jihadi groups, especially in Iraq and Syria, authorities said Monday.

A Spanish Interior Ministry statement said police detained the eight in Madrid early Monday on suspicion of recruiting jihadi militants for the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

It said the cell was led by a person who lives in Spain but had previously been jailed in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, after being arrested in Afghanistan in 2001.

Spain gave no immediate details on the nationalities of the arrested.

In Berlin, prosecutors spokesman Martin Steltner said police on Saturday arrested a 30-year-old Frenchman suspected of "supporting a terrorist organization" by fighting in Syria for the group.

Steltner said the suspect, who wasn't named because of German privacy laws, was wounded in fighting. He has also purportedly appeared in Islamic State propaganda videos.

A court will decide on his extradition to France in the coming weeks.

The French Interior Ministry said in a statement that the detainee had been identified by French intelligence agency DGSI as "dangerous and susceptible of acting on French soil." The statement said he was arrested upon arrival from Istanbul.

German police also arrested a 27-year-old German woman at the Frankfurt Airport on Thursday, and a 17-year-old German in Stuttgart on Friday. Both are being linked to Islamist extremist groups.

European authorities have stepped up their cross-border cooperation since four people were killed in Brussels by a suspected French Islamic extremist returned from Syria.

The suspect in that shooting passed through Frankfurt Airport earlier this year, triggering an alert from German authorities to their French colleagues, but they didn't ask for his arrest.

Information for this article was contributed by Angela Charlton and Frank Jordans of The Associated Press.

A Section on 06/17/2014

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