ROME, Aug. 11, 2006

Italy Arrests 40 In Security Crackdown

Police Raid Muslim Gathering Places After British Terror Plot Foiled

  • Play CBS Video Video Two Mothers Involved In Plot?

    Only On The Web: Sheila MacVicar reports on the investigation into what is being called the 'liquid bomb' plot. Purportedly, one female suspect was pregnant and another had a 6-month-old baby.

  • Video Details Of Terror Plot

    As Britain remains on its highest security alert, more details have emerged from the thwarted terror plot against U.S. bound planes. Charlie D'Agata reports from London.

  • Video 'Liquid Bomb' Plot Details

    New details have emerged in "the liquid bomb plot." Security sources say the terrorists wanted to detonate the bombs in-air directly over U.S. cities, maximizing the damage. Sheila MacVicar reports.

  •  (CBS/AP)

  • Interactive Trans-Atlantic Terror Plot

    Scheme to blow up U.S.-bound aircraft is foiled in U.K.; aviation security ratcheted up.

  • Fast Facts Italy

    Learn about the people, economy and history.

(AP)  Police said Friday they had arrested 40 people in cities across Italy in raids on Muslim gathering places in a security crackdown launched after Britain thwarted an alleged terror plot.

Italian anti-terrorism police also searched homes of Pakistani immigrants as part of a Belgian probe into Pakistanis suspected of financing a militant group with ties to al Qaeda, the Interior Ministry said Friday.

The arrests in Rome, Milan, Venice, Florence, Naples and other cities on Thursday and Friday "as part of an extraordinary operation that followed the British anti-terrorist operation," the ministry said in a statement.

Twenty-eight people were arrested for violating rules on residence permits and 12 were arrested for property crimes, the statement said, without giving details. The raids resulted in 114 expulsion orders and found numerous irregularities at call centers, the Internet cafes and the money transfer offices.

More than 4,100 people were stopped for identification checks, the ministry said.

The raids were made on "Islamic gathering places, including call centers, Internet points and money-transfer" offices, the ministry said.

In past years, Italian police have made similar sweeps of telephone call centers and money-transfer offices where many Muslims gather.

The raids of Friday and Thursday preceded by a few days a top-level meeting on security by intelligence experts in Italy. The meeting of intelligence and police chiefs had been originally scheduled for Aug. 15 but was moved up a day after the British developments.

On Friday morning, agents from Italy's DIGOS anti-terrorism police searched 15 homes in several Italian cities where foreign nationals, mostly Pakistanis live, as part of a Belgian police probe into suspected financing of terrorism, the ministry said.

That operation resulted in the seizure of documents that are being examined and three expulsion orders because the foreigners had irregular residence papers.

Italy stepped up security at airports and other sensitive sites, including British interests, on Thursday after the British developments, but did not raise its terror alert to the highest level.

Italian authorities said Belgian police are investigating "a group of Pakistanis suspected of financing the terrorist group Lashkar-e-Tayyaba," the interior ministry said.

Lashkar, which in its early years focused largely on Kashmir, is widely believed to have ties with al Qaeda.

Exactly a year earlier, a similar security sweep in Italy at money transfer centers, Muslim butcher shops and similar places resulted in 141 arrests. Those raids came a few weeks after the London subway attacks.

Italy's Islamic Anti-Defamation League criticized the latest raids.

"More than 4,000 people were stopped and humiliated to allow police to arrest 12 chicken thieves and 28 clandestine" migrants, the league's spokeswoman Dacia Valent was quoted as saying by the Apcom news agency.



©MMVI The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Share:
  • Share
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Mixx
Add a Comment
by one_american August 12, 2006 1:45 PM EDT
If you are a law-abiding citizen of the United States, no matter where you come from, you are protected under the U.S. Constitution. There is no need for organizations such as CAIR. CAIR, however, is a special interest parasite on its host, the U.S., which seeks to build a state-within-a-state, much like Hezbolla operates within Lebanon. If you read some of the comments from the head of CAIR from 1993, you will see that he seeks to convert all of America (by force if necessary, no doubt) to a Muslim nation. CAIR must be terminated immediately, before it is allowed to undermine U.S. laws and the American way of life.
Reply to this comment
by alphaa10-2009 August 12, 2006 12:26 AM EDT
Yes, we should beware of advocacy groups because of their tendency to push an agenda, but even so, sometimes they may have some truth on their side. People of MidEast descent have organized in CAIR to counterpoint the hate speech against them they see everywhere in America-- on the blogs, for example.

If you or your family came from one of the Arab lands, or Egypt, Pakistan, Afghanistan or Iran-- or if you happen to be a convert to Islam-- you would feel a bit paranoid, right now. As a law-abiding American citizen, you might even think all this news about people of MidEast origin puts you in a bad light, and is an organized effort to slander you and your ethnic community.

Our newer American citizens can take heart, though-- nothing is as organized as it may seem, certainly not in this country.
Reply to this comment
by one_american August 11, 2006 7:52 PM EDT
Italy's Islamic Anti-Defamation League sounds just like CAIR in America.

Islamic Fascists get blamed for everything they do.
Reply to this comment

Exclusive Webshow

Mike Huckabee on GOP "rock stars," 2012, health care reform and more. Watch Now

  • MOST POPULAR
Discussed
  1. Lambert: Offering No Apologies

    (490 recent comments)

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: