Dutch Police Detain Suspect In Concert Terror Threat
ROTTERDAM, Netherlands (AP) β Alerted by a detailed tip from Spanish colleagues, Dutch police arrested a man early Thursday and said he was suspected of preparing an attack on a concert in Rotterdam by an American rock band.
The arrest in Brabant province, south of Rotterdam, came hours after police canceled a performance Wednesday night by Los Angeles band Allah-Las at a converted grain silo in the heart of the port city.
βThe suspicion is that the suspect is involved in the preparation of a terrorist attack,β Rotterdam Police Chief Frank Paauw said.
βThere is no terror threat now anymore,β he added. βThere is no threat because we have arrested a suspect and the information about the threat was so specific on the location of the event that, with that arrest, we can conclude that the threat is gone.β
The 22-year-old man was being questioned to determine exactly what his role was in the threat, police spokeswoman Svetlana Westermeijer said. No charges had been filed yet.
If authorities want to prolong the suspectβs detention they will have to arraign him at a closed-door hearing with an investigative judge before the end of Friday, prosecution spokeswoman Jeichien de Graaff said.
Police searched the manβs home after his arrest but released no details of anything they found. His identity wasnβt released, in line with Dutch privacy guidelines.
Security and Justice Minister Stef Blok, in an interview with BNR radio, suggested the suspect may only have spread the threat on a social media platform, though Blok didnβt give details.
βThe person who spread the message has been picked up and he will be questioned,β Blok said in a reference to the manβs arrest. βWe are very curious to hear from him why he carried out this idiotic action.β
Meanwhile, a Spanish mechanic detained Thursday night while driving, apparently drunk, a white van containing a number of gas canisters close to the concert venue was to be questioned once he sobered up, police said.
The Spaniard didnβt appear to be a terror suspect, and police said a search of his home uncovered nothing to indicate he was linked to the threat. Explosives experts who combed through the vanβs contents found a few gas canisters but nothing suspicious, police said.
Dutch Counterterror Coordinator Dick Schoof commended the police action, tweeting that it was βalert, appropriate for the current threat level.β
Schoof left the countryβs threat level unchanged at βsubstantial,β the fourth step of a five-level scale.
It wasnβt clear what the nature of the threat to the concert was, or if the bandβs name played any role in the threat.
In an interview with The Guardian last year, band members said they chose the word Allah, Arabic for God, because they were seeking a βholy-soundingβ name and didnβt realize it might cause offense.
βWe get emails from Muslims, here in the U.S. and around the world, saying theyβre offended, but that absolutely wasnβt our intention,β lead singer Miles Michaud said in the interview. βWe email back and explain why we chose the name, and mainly they understand.β
Police in Warsaw, Poland, said security was being beefed up for the bandβs performance there Thursday night.
Warsaw police spokesman Robert Szumiata told The Associated Press they had no information of any threat to the concert to be held at the downtown NIEBO, or Heaven, club.
Still, he said that uniformed and plainclothes police would be deployed at and around the concert site in order to βensure security of people taking part in the concert and those who will find themselves in the area.β
Spain, already on high alert following last weekβs deadly attacks in and near Barcelona that killed 15 people and injured more than 120 others, played a key role in the events of Wednesday and Thursday.
A Spanish counterterrorism official said Spainβs Civil Guard received βan alert indicating the possibility of an attack in a concert that was going to take place in Rotterdam.β
The Civil Guard shared the information with Dutch authorities Wednesday and was investigating the threat, said the official, who spoke anonymously because the Civil Guard is still analyzing the threat.
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Mike Corder reported from The Hague. AP writers Aritz Parra in Madrid and Monika Scislowska in Warsaw, Poland, contributed to this report.
                                            
                                        
                                            
                                        
                                            
                                        
                                            
                                        
                                            
                                        