News makers: Spain arrests woman suspected of IS links

Published September 6, 2015
Gandia (Spain): Police arrest the 18-year-old Moroccan woman suspected of recruiting other women via the internet to the self-styled Islamic State.—AFP
Gandia (Spain): Police arrest the 18-year-old Moroccan woman suspected of recruiting other women via the internet to the self-styled Islamic State.—AFP

VALENCIA: Spanish police on Saturday arrested an 18-year-old Moroccan woman accused of preparing to travel to Syria to join the self-styled Islamic State (IS).

She was the latest in a series of suspected IS sympathisers detained in Spain since last year over security concerns.

Police led the woman from her home in the town of Gandia near Valencia, her face and body covered in a black veil and full-length robe with just her bound hands showing.

Armed officers stood guard outside her door and others in balaclavas carried away boxes of evidence from inside.

Police said she was suspected of recruiting other women via the Internet to the group, also known as Daesh, which has claimed numerous kidnappings and executions.

At the time of her arrest, the suspect “was making the last preparations for her journey” to Syria, a police statement said.

She was not the first woman arrested in Spain for allegedly recruiting women and girls for the armed group, after another was detained on the island of Lanzarote in July.

More than 100 people from Spain are suspected of having joined jihadist fighters in Iraq and Syria, and authorities fear they may return to launch attacks.

In March 2004, Al Qaeda inspired bombers blew up four packed commuter trains in Madrid, killing 191 people.

More than 20 people including a number of Moroccans were convicted of that attack.

Police said the woman detained was Moroccan but had lived for a long time in Spain. Officers arrested her “for suspected links with jihadist terrorist activities,” the statement said.

“She spread jihadist ideology on the Internet, justifying terrorist acts and spreading videos that glorified executions of people,” it said.

“She had focussed her online activity on recruiting women to go and swell the ranks of Daesh”.—AFP

Published in Dawn, September 6th, 2015

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