Possible Syria terror link to Paris arrests: Minister

French police investigating a suspected bomb factory near Paris believe three men arrested in connection with it were preparing attacks and had made calls to Syria, a minister said on Sept. 7. 

Ingredients to make an explosive known as TATP, commonly used by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), were discovered in the apartment in the Parisian suburb of Villejuif on Sept. 6, as well as gas canisters and electrical wiring.

Anti-terror police launched raids following a tip-off from someone who works in the building who has been praised for his "citizen's reflex" for reporting suspicious activity.

Speaking on Sept. 7 on Franceinfo radio, Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said the men in custody -- two were arrested on Sept. 6 and a third overnight -- "were involved in terrorism."   

"We've seen that there were calls exchanged" with someone in the war-zone in Syria, Collomb added.

The men have denied they were preparing attacks, claiming they were planning a string of robberies in which the explosives would be used to blow up bank cash machines, Collomb said.

The arrests raised questions about whether the suspects might be linked to a jihadist cell in Spain which carried out two vehicle attacks in Barcelona and Cambrils last month.

Some of the extremists behind the violence in Spain -- mostly Moroccan nationals who were also preparing bombs made with TATP -- visited Paris on August 11 and 12 about a week before their deadly rampage.
Collomb said "it was possible there were links but honestly I don't know."   

The Spain attackers stayed in a hotel in the Parisian suburb of Malakoff a short drive from where the suspected bomb factory was discovered on Sept. 6 in Villejuif.

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