Bomber in intense online chat before blast, Germany reports

A broken window photographed at the site of the attack in Ansbach, Germany, Tuesday July 26, 2016. In the most recent attack in Germany, a 27-year-old Syrian asylum-seeker set off a backpack laden with explosives and shrapnel Sunday night after being refused entry to a crowded music festival in the Bavarian city of Ansbach, killing himself and wounding 15 people.
A broken window photographed at the site of the attack in Ansbach, Germany, Tuesday July 26, 2016. In the most recent attack in Germany, a 27-year-old Syrian asylum-seeker set off a backpack laden with explosives and shrapnel Sunday night after being refused entry to a crowded music festival in the Bavarian city of Ansbach, killing himself and wounding 15 people.

BERLIN -- The 27-year-old Syrian asylum seeker who blew himself up in the southern German town of Ansbach was chatting online with a still-unidentified person immediately before the explosion, Bavaria's interior minister said Wednesday.

Attacker Mohammed Daleel died and 15 people were wounded when his bomb exploded outside a wine bar Sunday night after he was denied entry to a nearby open-air concert because he didn't have a ticket.

"There was apparently an immediate contact with someone who had a significant influence on this attack," state Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann said on the sidelines of a party meeting in Bavaria, the dpa news agency reported.

It wasn't clear who Daleel was in contact with or where the other person in the chat was, Herrmann said. He said investigators checking the assailant's cellphone came across the "intensive chat" and that "the chat appears to end immediately before the attack."

"Because of witness testimony on what happened and also the course of the chat, there are indeed questions about whether he intended to set off the bomb at that moment," Herrmann said.

On Tuesday night, the online magazine of the Islamic State extremist group said the attacker spent months planning the attack, once even hiding his homemade bomb in his room in a state-supported shelter moments before a police raid.

The Al-Nabaa magazine's report added that Daleel had fought in Iraq and Syria with a branch of al-Qaida and the Islamic State before arriving in Germany as an asylum seeker two years ago.

Herrmann said a roll of 50-euro notes was found on the attacker. It's unclear where the money came from -- but it is "unlikely that it could have been paid for solely from what an asylum seeker in Germany gets in the way of pocket money." He didn't disclose the total value of the cash.

The Ansbach explosion was the last of four attacks in Germany in a week, two of which were claimed by the Islamic State.

The German government said President Barack Obama offered his sympathy to Chancellor Angela Merkel over the attacks in a phone call Wednesday. Both stressed their will to continue fighting international terrorism together and with determination, the government said.

On Wednesday night, German police said they raided a mosque believed to be a "hot spot" for Islamic extremists, and the interior ministry of Lower Saxony state said the apartments of eight leading members of the mosque's community were also searched.

The attacks have brought Merkel's policy of welcoming refugees -- more than 1 million last year -- under renewed criticism.

A senior figure in the nationalist Alternative for Germany party, which has no seats in the national parliament but saw its popularity surge after last year's migrant influx, suggested Wednesday that there should be "a halt to immigration for Muslims to Germany" until all asylum seekers now in the country have been registered, checked and had their applications processed.

"For security reasons, we can no longer afford to allow yet more Muslims to immigrate to Germany without control," Alexander Gauland, a deputy party leader, said in a statement. "There are terrorists among the Muslims who immigrated illegally and their number is rising constantly."

But Interior Ministry spokesman Johannes Dimroth said that "for some time" all new arrivals have been registered and checked against security databases.

As for whether people could be treated differently depending on their religion, "as I understand it that simply would be incompatible with our understanding of freedom of religion," he said.

Al-Nabaa's Arabic-language report on the attacker said he initially fought against government forces with al-Qaida's branch in Syria before pledging alliance to the Islamic State in 2013. He also helped the group with its propaganda efforts, setting up pro-Islamic State accounts online.

In Germany, he started making the bomb, a process that took three months, Al-Nabaa wrote.

The Islamic State earlier claimed the Ansbach attack, publishing a video it said was of Daleel pledging allegiance to the group and vowing that Germany's people "won't be able to sleep peacefully anymore." It appears to be the same video as the one found by German investigators on the suicide bomber's phone.

Daleel unsuccessfully sought asylum in Germany and was awaiting deportation to Bulgaria.

A Section on 07/28/2016

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