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A group of Al Qaeda terrorists trained in Pakistani camps and assisted by underworld don Dawood Ibrahim are planning to storm Germany's Parliament in a Mumbai-style attack, a media report has said, prompting authorities in Berlin to step up security of the building.
The police have cordoned off the area around the historic Reichstag building housing Parliament and heightened security, after authorities received a tip-off that a group of militants were on their way to stage a Mumbai-style attack.
Hundreds of extra policemen have been pressed into service to protect other possible targets as well such as airports, railway stations and places of mass gatherings across the country.
The heightened security for the Reichstag comes after the news magazine Der Spiegel reported that a group of six Al Qaeda terrorists, who have visited training camps in the border areas between Pakistan and Afghanistan, are planning to storm the building housing Bundestag, the lower house of parliament, early next year.
Two of them have already arrived in Berlin six to eight weeks ago and their accomplices -- a German, a Turk, a north African and an unidentified man -- are waiting to enter the country. Their attacks are planned for February or March next year, the magazine said.
The warning about the planned attack on the Reichstag came to the Federal Criminal Office from a German Islamic militant, who slipped inside Pakistan some time ago to receive training in the terrorist camps there and now wants to return to his family.
However, German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere issued a separate warning about 'concrete evidence' of an attack by Islamic terrorists at the end of November on the basis of a second tip-off received by the BKA from the US Federal Bureau of Investigation, the magazine said.
The United States domestic intelligence service warned that a Shia militant group called Saif had entered into a pact with the Al Qaeda to carry out an attack in Germany and two men dispatched by the group were waiting to enter Germany via the UAE on November 22 with Schengen visas, Der Spiegel said.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation has identified Mustaq Altaf Bin-Khadri as the mastermind behind the plot and he is being assisted in getting the men across to Germany by weapons and narcotics smuggler Dawood Ibrahim, the report said.
A government spokesman on Saturday declined to comment on the Spiegel report and said the government has nothing new to add beyond the warning of a possible terrorist attack in November issued by the interior minister.
The Focus magazine, meanwhile, said security authorities are investigating reports that Schengen visas may have been issued to some suspected terrorists in India, Pakistan and the UAE, possibly also with forged passports. They include two Pakistanis, two Indians as well as two German nationals of Syrian and Moroccan origin, it said.
Focus said the Federal Criminal Office holds the view that Al Qaeda may have formed a team comprising nationals of different countries to carry out an attack in Germany.
A confidential BKS study showed that the Schengen visa, which allows unrestricted travel to a number of European countries, might be of great significance for terrorists trained abroad to plan and execute new attacks in Europe.
Chancellor Angela Merkel reacted for the first time to the terror warnings and said the nation is confronted by a 'real threat' from terrorists.
Addressing a news conference in Lisbon, where she attended the NATO summit, Merkel called upon the German public to remain calm and not to allow terrorists to disrupt their daily life.
Head of the Federal Criminal Office Joerg Ziercke said security authorities have no concrete information about specific targets or about the persons planning the attacks. Investigations are focusing, among others, on those militants who are returning to Germany after attending training camps in Pakistan-Afghanistan border.
Other 'suspected groups' are also under close watch, he told a news conference in Hamburg. Police protection has been stepped up for some of the country's best known landmarks and places of mass gatherings, which will be high on the priority list of the terrorists, Ziercke said.
He urged the people not to panic and assured them that the authorities are doing everything possible to track down the suspected terrorists before they can strike.