Tolga I, who is known in his circle as ‘Amir’, appears to be a sort of “commander-in-chief” who has given the order to Mohammed B and Yussuf T to explode a bomb at the Nanaksar Satsangh Sabha Gurudwara on the evening of April 16, ‘Report Muenchen’ programme of the ARD TV network said.
During interrogation, 17-year-old Tolga did not reveal the background or motive for targeting the Sikh temple, which hosted a wedding ceremony attended by over 200 guests.
He admitted that he was part of a group which carried out the bomb attack on the gurudwara.
Investigators are trying to establish whether Tolga I as well as sixteen-year-old secondary school students Mohammed and Yussuf arrested four days after the attack are part of a terror network or their group included more young people, the report said.
A 60-year-old Sikh priest was seriously injured and two others suffered minor injuries in the explosion, which ripped through the entrance hall of the gurudwara.
Investigators have traced a link of the three men to a radical Muslim clergy and to a travel agency in the city of Duisburg, near Essen, the report said.
The three have also frequently visited the Assalam Mosque in Essen, which is known to the authorities as a meeting place of radical Islamists.
Meanwhile, Germany’s federal prosecutor’s office is examining the possibility to take over the investigations into the bomb attack from the state prosecutor in Essen on suspicion that the three teenagers arrested are part of a terror network, the report said.
Tolga, who was taken into custody on an arrest warrant issued by the district court in Essen, came to police attention after his mother informed them about his links to radical Islamists and handed them over some notices made by her son, the report said.
She was worried that Tolga was preparing to leave for Syria to fight for the Islamic State terror group.
He is also known to have contacts with the “Lohberger Brigade”, in Dinslaken, a group of jihadists who have joined IS militants as fighters some years ago, according to the report.
Local authorities in the town of Schermbeck, near the area where the family lives, banned Tolga from travelling abroad and impounded his passport after his mother approached the police.
This cooperation may have prevented him from travelling to Syria, but could not take him away from his radical Islamist course, the report said.
Investigators found on Tolga’s Facebook profile a message from April 17 that he got married on that day.
They believe that Yussuf and Mohammed also did the same during the last six weeks and all of them found their partners through Islamic matrimonial agencies.
Their wedding ceremonies were conducted under strict Islamic traditions, according to the report.
Investigators are still groping in the dark about whom the terror suspects married and what was their motive, the report said.
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