TerrorismEuropean capitals on alert after warnings of possible terror attacks before the New Year

Published 28 December 2015

Police forces in several European capitals say that they have been advised by a “friendly” intelligence service of the possibility of fresh terror attacks launched before the New Year. The reports did not name specific capitals, but that security measures in Vienna, Austria, have been beefed up considerably. The Austrian police said they were responding to concrete information about the possibility of an attack between Christmas and the New Year which would take place in “crowded places.”

Security forces preparing an assault on suspected terrorists // Source: wikipedia.org

Police forces in several European capitals say that they have been advised by a “friendly” intelligence service of the possibility of fresh terror attacks launched before the New Year.

The Independent reports that the reports did not name specific capitals, but that security measures in Vienna, Austria, have been beefed up considerably. The Austrian police said they were responding to concrete information about the possibility of an attack between Christmas and the New Year which would take place in “crowded places.”

“Several possible names of potential attackers were mentioned, which were checked, and the investigation based on [these checks] has so far yielded no concrete results,” Vienna police said in a statement.

“In the days before Christmas a warning was sent out by a friendly [intelligence] service to numerous European capitals, saying that it could come to an attack involving explosives or a shooting between Christmas and the New Year in crowded spaces.”

France is still under a 3-months state of emergency which the government announced in the wake of the 13 November terrorist attacks which killed 132 people.

Vienna police have asked Austrians living or visiting the capital between this past weekend and next for patience and understanding with increased security measures, which include electronic and human surveillance in crowded places “especially at events and traffic hubs,” in addition to intensive identity checks, random searches of shopping bags and backpacks, and a higher alertness for objects that could carry explosives, such as “bicycle frames.”

The authorities stressed that no events will be cancelled.

Christph Polzl, a spokesman for the Austrian police service, told the Guardian that “We do not know if these people exist in real life, or if they are only names with no real person behind them.

“We have no evidence they are in Vienna, and we have no evidence that they are even in Europe,” he said.

The German Interior Ministry’s spokesman said it was his offices policy not to comment on specific situations because f operational considerations

Germany is still in the crosshairs of Jihadist terrorism,” he said, adding the country had reviewed and adapted its security measures, where necessary, following the Paris attacks.