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French police hold three teens over jihadist links

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AFP Paris
Three teenagers linked to an Islamic State group jihadist have been arrested around Paris in the past week as investigators probe the use of an encrypted messaging app to plot attacks in France, judicial sources said today.

Today, a teenager was arrested in a dawn raid on his home in northeastern Paris as part of an investigation into the network of French extremist Rachid Kassim.

Investigators said the youth, aged 14 or 15, was in touch with Kassim on the encrypted Telegram app and had "put himself forward for a terrorist act".

His arrest came four days after a 15-year-old picked up in the upmarket western Paris suburb of Rueil-Malmaison was remanded in custody on terror charges, a source confirmed to AFP.
 

The 15-year-old, who was already on a watchlist of known radicals, was also arrested over his links to Kassim, who is suspected of using Telegram to direct attacks on France from IS-controlled territory in Iraq or Syria.

The source said the youth's online messages suggested he may have been planning to stage an attack. Earlier this year he was charged with disseminating IS propaganda on the internet.

Their arrests bring to three the number of minors detained in various parts of the French capital within a week as the authorities scramble to tamp down home-grown jihadist violence that is increasingly drawing in teens.

On Monday, a 15-year-old from eastern Paris was charged with conspiring to commit terrorist acts after describing plans on Telegram to carry out a knife attack, sources said.

Kassim, a 29-year-old former social worker from the Loire valley who has appeared in several IS propaganda videos, is believed to have been a key influence on all three youths.

He is also suspected of ordering or inciting the killing of a police couple in their home west of Paris in June as well as the murder of an elderly priest in a Normandy church in July.

Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said today that the intelligence services were "working harder than ever" to prevent assaults incited by "a number of characters in Syria who used encrypted methods" to spur on supporters, who are "getting younger and younger."

Kassim was also in contact with an all-female gang of radicals who have been charged with planning another attack after an apparent failed attempt to blow up a car packed with gas cylinders near Paris's Notre Dame cathedral.

The three women were also believed to be planning an attack on a train station or on the police. Two of them had previously been on a police watchlist for their extremist views.

Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content

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First Published: Sep 14 2016 | 10:28 PM IST

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