Spain suspect says terror cell planned bigger attack: judicial source
An alleged member of the terror cell that unleashed carnage in Spain last week admitted to a judge on Tuesday that he and other suspects had planned a bigger attack, a judicial source said.
Mohamed Houli Chemlal, 21, was the first of four surviving suspects to be questioned in Madrid’s National Court, which deals with terror-related cases, over the attacks in Barcelona and a seaside resort that claimed 15 lives and wounded more than 100 people.
The Spaniard was injured in an accidental explosion at a makeshift bomb factory on Wednesday evening that killed an imam, Abdelbaki Es Satty, thought to have radicalised him and other young suspects.
Police had previously revealed that the suspected jihadists had been preparing bombs for “one or more attacks in Barcelona”.
Josep Lluis Trapero, head of police in Catalonia, said 120 gas canisters and traces of TATP components – a home-made explosive that is a hallmark of Islamic State that claimed the attacks – had been found at their bomb factory.
The accidental explosion in the house in Alcanar, south of Barcelona, may have forced the suspects to modify their plans.