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German intelligence chief warns radical Islamists may try to recruit young refugees arriving in the country

'Our attention is particularly focused on unaccompanied young refugees who could be easy prey for Islamists'

Reuters
Tuesday 22 September 2015 13:41 BST
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A refugee child from Afghanistan sleeps in the main hall of the train station in Munich, Germany, late 10 September 2015, as in the background other refugees are sitting. Germany expects 800,000 asylum seekers this year, four times more than last year and more than any other country in the European Union, which is split on how to deal with the biggest refugee crisis since World War II.
A refugee child from Afghanistan sleeps in the main hall of the train station in Munich, Germany, late 10 September 2015, as in the background other refugees are sitting. Germany expects 800,000 asylum seekers this year, four times more than last year and more than any other country in the European Union, which is split on how to deal with the biggest refugee crisis since World War II. (EPA/ANDREAS GEBERT)

The head of Germany's domestic intelligence services has warned that radical Islamists could seek to recruit young refugees coming to the country.

"There is a big worry that Islamists in Germany, on the pretext of offering humanitarian help, could try to take advantage of the migrants' situation to convert and recruit those seeking asylum," said Hans-Georg Maassen, the president of the BfV domestic intelligence agency.

"Our attention is particularly focused on unaccompanied young refugees who could be easy prey for Islamists," Maassen said.

The remarks came just hours after police raided eight properties in Berlin, including a mosque association, that they suspect were being used by Islamists supporting fighting in Syria.

The comments will also feed into a divisive debate in Germany about how the country should deal with an influx of hundreds of thousands of migrants.

Maassen said that the number of ultra-conservative Salafist Muslims in Germany had risen to 7,900, compared with 7,500 in June. Some 740 Islamists from Germany, of which a fifth are women, have travelled to Syria and Iraq.

One third of those are now back in Germany, while 120 have died. Maassen said that there was no proof yet that Islamists had infiltrated the refugees.

Reuters

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