Morocco detains four ‘dangerous’ ISIS suspects

A policeman runs during a protest in Rabat, November 14, 2007.

A policeman runs during a protest in Rabat, November 14, 2007.


Moroccan police have arrested four “dangerous” suspected militants linked to the ISIS group who were planning attacks across the country, the government said on Thursday.

Investigators apprehended an individual on Wednesday in the northern city of Meknes who had been “planning terrorist attacks in Morocco,” according to a statement from the interior ministry.

The suspect had “acquired vast experience in the manufacture of remote-detonated explosives” and was “about to procure essential materials to make” a bomb, it added.

Last week three suspected extremists were arrested around Tangiers, in northern Morocco, reportedly in the process of preparing “extremely serious terrorist acts”, the statement said.

The head of the cell had allegedly been contacted by a Moroccan ISIS member and had planned to travel to join the militants in Iraq or Syria.

Rabat says more than 150 “terrorist cells” have been uncovered since 2002, including dozens in the past three years with ties to militants in Iraq and Syria.

A study by the US-based Soufan Group said last December that at least 1,200 Moroccans had travelled to fight alongside ISIS in Iraq and Syria in the previous 18 months.






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