Spanish Police Arrest 4 Suspected Members of Jihadi Cell

This version of Spanish Police Arrest 4 Suspected Members Jihadi Cell N292946 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.

The two sets of radicalized brothers were ready to carry out an attack and received orders from ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, authorities said.
Image: SPANISH POLICE ARREST FOUR ALLEGED JIHADISTS IN CEUTA
epa04580977 Spanish police men are deployed in the El Principe suburb of Ceuta, the Spanish enclave in northern Africa, 24 January 2015 only hours after they arrested four alleged jihadists. Two pairs of Moroccan-born Spanish siblings were arrested early morning. According to Spanish Home Minister Jorge Fernandez Diaz, they are 'strongly radicalized' and they were willing to committ a terrorist attack. EPA/REDUANREDUAN / EPA

Spanish National Police arrested four suspected jihadis Saturday in the country's North African enclave of Ceuta who allegedly had formed a terror cell and were ready to carry out an attack, the Interior Ministry said.

Interior Minister Jorge Fernandez Diaz said investigators, working with their Moroccan counterparts, were struck by the similarities between the suspected cell members and the two French brothers who killed 12 people in an attack upon the Charlie Hebdo newspaper in Paris.

"These are two pairs of very radicalized brothers who are highly trained militarily, physically and mentally and are prepared to carry out an attack, and ready, according to the police, to blow themselves up in the act," Fernandez Diaz said.

Two houses in Ceuta were searched in Saturday morning police raids and four men, all Spanish citizens of Moroccan origin, were arrested, the agency said. Officers found an automatic pistol, ammunition, military fatigues, face-concealing hoods, Spanish vehicle license plates, large machetes, knives and documents.

The ministry said the four were following instructions given by the al-Qaida in Iraq leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, via what it called "a powerful and aggressive communication campaign" including jihadi Internet forums and websites. Al-Baghdadi is now the leader of the extremist group ISIS, which controls about a third of Iraq and Syria. Investigators were still assessing the cell's "infrastructure to carry out terror attacks in the country," the ministry said.

Image: Four alleged jihadists transfered to Madrid
A helicopter carrying four alleged jihadists takes off towards Madrid, central Spain, from the civil heliport in Ceuta, a Spanish enclave in northern Africa, on Saturday.REDUAN / EPA

IN-DEPTH

— The Associated Press

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