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Police raid migrant smuggling network with connections to far-right

800 police officers searched buildings in northern and central Germany where several suspects are said to have smuggled foreigners into Germany with fake documents. Some suspects are alleged to be connected to the alt-right Reichsbürger movement.

Police raid migrant smuggling network with connections to far-right
Suspect in Hamburg taken out by police. Photo: DPA

With 800 officers, the federal police searched apartments and offices in more than a dozen locations in northern and central Germany on Monday evening and early Tuesday morning, including Hamburg, Bremen and towns in Saxony-Anhalt.

First reported by news agencies NDR, WDR and Süddeutsche Zeitung, the raid was against eight suspects alleged to have smuggled several hundred Moldovan citizens intoto Germany with forged Romanian passports and employed them illegally in the security industry.

Süddeutsche Zeitung reported that the shelters of the smuggled Moldovans were searched on Tuesday morning before they left for their jobs. The illegal immigrants were questioned by the police in order to ascertain and register their real identities.

The police, including various special units, searched multiple premises in the Hamburg area, two buildings in Bremen and more in Saxony-Anhalt.

A spokesman for the federal police in Pirna said that approximately 800 officers have executed 21 search warrants since Monday evening, and further noted that some suspects have ties to the far-right Reichsbürger movement in Saxony-Anhalt.

The Reichsbürger movement is considered extremist due to the fact that it rejects the legitmacy of the modern German state, and its adherents consider themselves “Reich citizens”. Police did not immediately say how the Reichsbürger scene may be connected with the smugglings.

Two Germans and one Russian between the ages of 30 and 43 had already been provisionally arrested in Hamburg on Monday. On Tuesday, a decision is expected to be made as to whether to issue an official arrest warrant for the men.

Many of the illegal Moldavians worked in the port of Hamburg as security guards on various construction sites and even in asylum seekers' homes.
 
Since last October, the public prosecutor's office in Lüneburg, a town near Hamburg, has been investigating the network of smugglers.
 

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POLICE

Spanish police rescued from sea by smugglers they were chasing

Three Spanish police officers who were thrown into the sea when their boat crashed early Friday during a high-speed chase were pulled to safety by the drug-smugglers they were chasing, police said.

Spanish police rescued from sea by smugglers they were chasing
Handout / Spanish Guardia Civil / AFP

The unexpected rescue happened after a police vessel began pursuing a speedboat “with four people on board that was suspected of transporting drugs” in waters off the southern coast of Spain, a police statement said.

READ: Brazen drug trafficking alarms southern Spain

During the chase, the two vessels collided, causing three police officers to fall into the sea as their boat “span out of control”.

Using a megaphone, a police helicopter that was hovering overhead called on those on board the speedboat to help and they pulled the three agents to safety unharmed.

The gesture did not spare them, however, when police found three tonnes of hashish in the water nearby.

“They were arrested for drug trafficking,” a police statement said, indicating that more than 80 bundles of hash had been recovered from the sea.

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