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NewsOctober 11, 2016

BERLIN -- A Syrian man suspected of preparing a bombing attack was apprehended by three of his countrymen who overpowered him, tied him up in their apartment and alerted police, authorities said Monday. The overnight arrest of Jaber Albakr ended a nearly two-day nationwide search for the 22-year-old German authorities launched after finding several pounds of explosives and components hidden in an apartment in the eastern city of Chemnitz on Saturday...

By KIRSTEN GRIESHABER ~ Associated Press

BERLIN -- A Syrian man suspected of preparing a bombing attack was apprehended by three of his countrymen who overpowered him, tied him up in their apartment and alerted police, authorities said Monday.

The overnight arrest of Jaber Albakr ended a nearly two-day nationwide search for the 22-year-old German authorities launched after finding several pounds of explosives and components hidden in an apartment in the eastern city of Chemnitz on Saturday.

Albakr arrived in Germany amid a flood of 890,000 asylum-seekers last year. Saxony criminal police chief Joerg Michaelis said the three Syrians who captured him recognized the suspect from wanted posters police posted online as part of the manhunt.

After taking him to their apartment late Sunday night, two of the Syrians bound and held Albakr as the third brought a cellphone photo of Albakr to a local police station, leading to the arrest early Monday, Michaelis said.

Prosecutors and police said Monday they considered Albakr an extremist with likely links to the Islamic State group. Germany's domestic intelligence agency had been watching him since September and alerted Saxony authorities about his alleged possible plot Friday, authorities said.

When police raided the apartment where he was thought to be staying on Saturday, Albakr was able to flee. Inside the apartment, they found 3.3 pounds of "extremely dangerous explosives" and components, according to federal prosecutors.

Criminal police chief Michaelis said, at this stage of the investigation, "the behavior and actions of the suspect speak for an IS context." He didn't elaborate.

A security official said there was no indication yet Albakr was being directed by the Islamic State group, but investigators were combing through seized evidence. The official wasn't authorized to discuss the investigation publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Police said it was not clear when and how the suspect met with his three countrymen in Leipzig, about 50 miles from Chemnitz, or whether they knew him.

They would not release any other information about the three Syrians who apprehended Albakr.

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If the signs of his having an extremist background were substantiated, "the people who gave the tip are of course in danger," the police chief said.

Federal prosecutors who handle terrorism investigations in Germany said in a statement Monday they had no indications a target had been chosen for an attack.

Hans-Georg Maassen, leader of the domestic intelligence agency, later told ARD public broadcaster their investigation suggests the suspect had "an eye on the Berlin airports" as potential targets.

A 33-year-old Syrian at whose Chemnitz apartment police found the hidden explosives was arrested over the weekend and is considered a co-conspirator in the alleged bomb plot, prosecutors said.

He was identified only as Khalil A. in keeping with German privacy laws. Albakr's full identity and photograph had been released while he was on the run and being sought.

The explosives were described as similar to the ones used in the deadly Nov. 13 attacks in Paris and the March 22 attacks in Brussels. Known as TATP, or triacetone triperoxide, it is fairly easy to make and detonate, police said.

"According to everything we know today, the preparations in Chemnitz are similar to the preparations for the attacks in Paris and Brussels," German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said.

A bomb squad destroyed the explosives Saturday in a pit outside the five-story apartment building because they were considered too dangerous to transport.

The incident comes amid ongoing concerns about the flood of asylum seekers that entered Germany last year and increasing support for populist parties with anti-migrant rhetoric.

The country also has been on edge since two attacks in July carried out by asylum seekers and claimed by the Islamic State group, in which multiple people were injured and the assailants were killed.

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