UK officials shut down a terminal of Britain's No. 2 airport for hours after a man was spotted discarding what looked like a firearm.
Europe has been mostly free of land-based border checks for decades, but the attacks prompted authorities in countries from Belgium to Hungary to re-impose spot inspections of vehicles. Some local authorities vowed to do the work if their national governments don't.
"The days of unchecked immigration and illegal entry can't continue," Soeder told the Welt am Sonntag weekly newspaper. "Paris changes everything."
And if Germany can't secure its borders, he said, "then Bavaria can take on this task."
Soeder, a member of the conservative sister party of Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic Union, made the comments as Bavarian officials confirmed that firearms, explosives and hand grenades were found when undercover police stopped a man near the German-Austrian border on November 5.
Following a request from France, Germany ramped up border controls, focusing on road, rail and air traffic from France to Germany, said German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere.
British officials called in explosive specialists and evacuated the North Terminal at Gatwick Airport after a French man got rid of an item authorities said appeared to be a firearm. The man was arrested on suspicion of firearms offenses, though authorities were not sure whether the weapon was useable.
London was among cities that put in place high-visibility patrols at key locations to reassure citizens, with Metropolitan Police Commissioner Bernard Hogan-Howe stressing that the "scale of the attacks and the range of weaponry used by the terrorists are a serious cause for concern.
