Extremists in France planned to fight in Syria, lawyer says - Action News
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Extremists in France planned to fight in Syria, lawyer says

A network of French Muslim extremists who carried out a grenade attack on a kosher market also planned to join jihadists fighting in Syria, a French prosecutor said Thursday, calling the group potentially the most dangerous established in France in over a decade.
French police officers converse Wednesday outside a building where authorities discovered bomb-making material last week, in Torcy, east of Paris. (Thibault Camus/AP)

A network of FrenchMuslim extremistswho carried out a grenade attack on a kosher market also planned to join jihadists fighting in Syria, a French prosecutor said Thursday, calling the group potentially the most dangerous established in France in over a decade.

Five of the 12 people arrested in sweeps in cities around France have been freed, said the prosecutor, Francois Molins. He said seven people remain in custody a day after police discovered bomb-making materials in an underground parking lot as part of a probe of an "extremely dangerous terrorist cell." All the suspects were born in France, he said.

The Sept. 19 attack on the market in Sarcelles, outside Paris, shattered windows and injured a customer at the store. Two attackers fled.

"The intent was to kill," Molins said.

DNA traces found on the grenade led anti-terror police to a convicted drug dealer who, Molins said, converted to radical Islam in prison. That suspect was killed in a shootout with police on Saturday.

He said one of the suspects was co-ordinating trips for jihadists to join fighting in Syria.

Most of those fighting against President Bashar al-Assad's regime are believed to be ordinary Syrians and soldiers who have defected, having become fed up with the authoritarian government, analysts say. But increasingly, foreign fighters and those adhering to an extremistMuslim ideology are becoming involved in the war. Two British nationals were arrested Tuesday at Heathrow Airport, on suspicion of supporting terrorism in Syria, possibly as part of a group that took two journalists hostage in July.

Authorities in France have been on high alert after a Frenchman who claimed links to al-Qaeda shot and killed three Jewish children, a rabbi and three paratroopers in southern France in March.