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European swoop on ‘jihadist network’ that planned suicide attacks, kidnap of diplomats

Terror ring, that has sent fighters to Iraq and Syria, intended to try to spring its leader out of detention in Norway.

Najmaddin Faraj Ahmad, known as Mullah Krekar, appearing in court in Oslo. European law enforcement authorities said Thursday Nov. 12, 2015 they've broken up a Norway-based Iraqi Kurdish recruitment ring that sent fighters to Iraq and Syria. Officials have issued arrest warrants for 17 people in a half-dozen European countries and in the Mideast. Italian authorities said Thursday the ideological leader of the ring was Najmaddin Faraj Ahmad, known as Mullah Krekar, who was already in prison in Norway. (Olav Nesvold / NTB scanpix via AP)
Najmaddin Faraj Ahmad, known as Mullah Krekar, appearing in court in Oslo. European law enforcement authorities said Thursday Nov. 12, 2015 they've broken up a Norway-based Iraqi Kurdish recruitment ring that sent fighters to Iraq and Syria. Officials have issued arrest warrants for 17 people in a half-dozen European countries and in the Mideast. Italian authorities said Thursday the ideological leader of the ring was Najmaddin Faraj Ahmad, known as Mullah Krekar, who was already in prison in Norway. (Olav Nesvold / NTB scanpix via AP)

European law enforcement authorities on Thursday announced a swoop on a European jihadist network that was allegedly planning to try to spring its leader out of detention in Norway.

Members of the the group were willing to become suicide bombers and planned to kidnap Norwegian diplomats either in Europe or the Middle East and hold them hostage, The Guardian reported.

Seventeen people were targeted in the raids across Europe — 16 Kurds and a Kosovan. Six of them have been arrested in Italy, four in Britain and three in Norway.

Several members of the group have traveled to Iraq and Syria to fight for the Islamic State group, police said.

Investigators said the network was trying to free fundamentalist preacher Najmuddin Ahmad Faraj — also known as Mullah Krekar — who is listed as a terrorist by the United States and United Nations and is currently in prison in Norway.

Giovanni Governale of the Italian police’s Special Operations Group told journalists the operation had “dismantled an integrated cell that included — in addition to Italy — Britain, Norway, Finland, Switzerland and Germany.”

The network developed “on the ‘dark web,’ little-known (Internet) platforms that we have managed to penetrate,” Governale said, adding that the swoop has allowed police to scupper “a process of recruitment, of sending (fighters) into combat abroad.”

Governale said the network “was about to continue sending many other jihadists abroad; it was about to carry out attacks, including suicide bombings, to try to free their chief, Mullah Krekar.”

The 59-year-old, a Kurdish Iraqi, has been living in Norway since 1991.

He has been at risk of deportation since 2003 after Norwegian authorities ordered him to be expelled as a threat to national security.

While courts have upheld the ruling, Norwegian law bars him from being deported to Iraq, where he risks the death penalty.

Krekar also founded the radical Islamist group Ansar al-Islam, but insists he has not led it since 2002.

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