Two years after an attempted intrusion into a Jewish place of worship by a far-right extremist, the German police proceeded on Thursday to several arrests the day after a threat of an attack on a synagogue in the middle of Yom Kippur.

In total, four arrests were carried out after the Hagen synagogue (west) was the subject of very tight surveillance by the police on Wednesday evening due to a threat of attack.

The suspect spotted on a discussion forum

The investigation notably "led to the identification and arrest of a 16-year-old young man from Hagen," local police announced late Thursday morning. "There was a danger of an attack on the synagogue in Hagen," confirmed Herbert Reul, the regional Minister of the Interior. The police force "probably prevented him", he added. The 16-year-old is believed to be a Syrian, according to

Spiegel

and

Bild

media

. He was reportedly arrested Thursday morning at Hagen station, three of his relatives also being arrested at their home, according to local media.

The German authorities have been alerted by a foreign intelligence service, according to these media.

The young Syrian would have announced an imminent attack on a discussion forum monitored by this service.

The attack was likely to be carried out Wednesday evening using homemade explosives, according to media.

On Wednesday evening, the celebration of Yom Kippur in this synagogue in Hagen, a city of 180,000 inhabitants located in the region of North Rhine-Westphalia, was abruptly canceled.

Antisemitic crimes and offenses on the rise

The police had deployed as early as Wednesday evening around the religious building several heavily armed men and dogs to find possible explosives. However, no bomb was discovered in or near the scene, local police said Thursday morning. Access to the streets around the synagogue had also been blocked in connection with "a possible dangerous situation in relation to a Jewish institution", the synagogue of Hagen, according to the police. This case comes almost two years after an attack on the synagogue in Halle, again during Yom Kippur.

The author, a right-wing extremist, had tried to enter the synagogue, but failed to do so, to shoot the worshipers there.

However, he had killed two people in the street and in a snack bar before being arrested.

He has since been sentenced to life in prison for the attack.

Antisemitic crimes and offenses have steadily increased in Germany in recent years, with 2,032 offenses recorded in 2019, 13% more than the previous year.

Germany has faced in recent years a dual jihadist and right-wing extremist threat, the latter having been elevated to the number one risk rank after several terrorist attacks or foiled attacks.

About twenty foiled attacks

The number of crimes committed by right-wing extremists has indeed jumped in 2020 to its highest level since the post-WWII era. But the jihadist threat also remains significant, the far-right AfD party, which entered parliament in 2017, attributing it to the reception of a million Syrian and Iraqi refugees in 2015 and 2016. Twelve people were thus killed during of a ram truck attack carried out at the end of 2016 by a radicalized Tunisian on a Christmas market in the center of Berlin.

More recently, a man was killed and another seriously injured in an Islamist and homophobic knife attack in Dresden by a 20-year-old Syrian.

The number of Islamists considered dangerous in Germany increased sharply between 2015 and 2018, according to the security services.

A total of 23 attacks have been foiled since 2000, Interior Minister Horst Seehofer announced on the occasion of the commemoration of the September 11 attacks.

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