5 suspected jihadi cell members arrested in France.
Story highlights
- Five men aged from 26 to 44 are arrested in a police raid in Lunel, southern France
- France's interior minister says the arrests deal a "new blow" to terrorism
Paris (CNN)Five
men were arrested in southern France Tuesday on suspicion of belonging
to a jihadist cell which was recruiting young French people, authorities
said.
Speaking at a news
conference in Paris, French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said "a
new blow has been dealt to terrorism" with the arrests in the Herault
region.
Police units carried out an
early morning raid in in the small town of Lunel overseen by the
anti-terror branch of the Paris prosecutor's office.
Five
men aged between 26 and 44 were arrested and remain in police custody.
Law enforcement agenst also conducted several searches.
According
to Cazeneuve, the five men "are suspected of active participation in a
jihadist thread whose members were recruited and indoctrinated, and then
themselves recruited and indoctrinated several French young people from
Lunel as well."
Agnes
Thibault-Lecuivre, a spokeswoman for the Paris prosecutor, told CNN
that "two men out of the five are suspected to have traveled to Syria,
two others were allegedly planning on traveling there."
It's too early to give out any further information, she said.
'A seriously dangerous and organized cell'
Cazeneuve emphasized the seriousness of the men's alleged jihadist ties.
"If
the involvement of the suspects is confirmed by the courts, a seriously
dangerous and organized cell will have been dismantled this morning,"
he said. "Yet another one."
It's been
almost three weeks since two gunmen attacked the French satirical
magazine Charlie Hebdo, killing 12 people, and another gunman shot a
policewoman in a Paris suburb and killed four hostages in a kosher
supermarket.
Since
then, authorities in France and elsewhere have cracked down on
suspected radical Islamists with links to the Paris attackers or to
terror networks overseas.
Cazeneuve on
Tuesday reiterated the "full mobilization and determination" of French
authorities to fight against terrorism "both inside and outside the
country."
Over the past year, he said,
more than 10 young men have left their hometown of Lunel for Syria,
where they joined the ranks of ISIS. Several of them have died in
fighting in Syria or Iraq.
In total, 73 French nationals have died under the same circumstances, he said.
cnn.