Friday, November 19, 2010

Suspected bomb likely bound for Germany, currently under "concrete" terror threat, found in Namibia

 A suspected bomb1  - a suit case containing a detonator, batteries and a ticking clock, but without any explosives2 - that was probably bound for Germany, has been found at at the international airport outside the Namibian capital Windhoek.1

 According to AFP,
"It is an unlabelled piece of luggage, which means that its destination was not indicated nor was the airline with which it was to fly.1

But Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said authorities had found "several indications" that the baggage was to be put on the Munich-bound flight.1
 On Wednesday, Germany stepped up security after receiving a tip-off from an unnamed country of "concrete indications" that Islamic extremists were making "sustained efforts" to carry out terror attacks against the country at the end of November.3

BBC reports,
officials say the country has a significant Islamist community, and militant links to Germany appear to be growing3


Sources: 1. AFP, 2. 3. BBC


UPDATE:

Germany bound suspected suitcase bomb in Namibia was a fake manufactured in the U.S. to test airport security



Follow up story:

Germany looking for two Pakistani and two Indians, believed already in the country, for planning end of November bombings there


Similar or related stories:

Two Yemeni airfreight parcel bombs intercepted en route to Chicago synagogues, one of them for gay Jews

Germany to punish forced marriages, common among Muslims, with 5 years jail

German Muslim convert terror suspect Sascha Alessandro Boettcher deported from Kenya

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