Story highlights
They're accused of recruiting, sending fighters to aid the ISIS terrorist group
The cell's suspected leader had been a prisoner at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, ministry says
The arrests come just ahead of the proclamation of Spain's new King Felipe VI on Thursday
This week, thousands of police and security forces will be on alert during coronation festivities
Spanish police arrested eight suspected Islamic militants in Madrid in predawn raids Monday, for allegedly recruiting and sending radical fighters to aid the terrorist group Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, the Interior Ministry said in a statement.
The arrests come just ahead of the proclamation of Spain’s new King Felipe VI on Thursday in parliament, and the ministry last week raised the terror alert level from 2 to 3, to tighten security in the capital during the festivities.
The suspected leader of the cell broken up Monday had been detained in Afghanistan in 2001 and later was a prisoner at the U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the ministry said.
Just last month, police arrested six Spanish men in the Spanish enclave of Melilla, on Morocco’s north coast, on suspicion of recruiting and sending 26 radical Islamic fighters for terrorist groups in Syria, Mali and Libya.
Also in Melilla, last March, a Spaniard and two Frenchmen were arrested on similar charges.
The movement of Islamic militants from Europe and North Africa to conflict zones such as Syria, Mali and Libya – and their eventual return to Spain to potentially carry out terrorist attacks – has been a prime concern for authorities battling terrorism.
This week, thousands of police and security forces will be on alert throughout Madrid; King Juan Carlos, 76, Spain’s head of state and commander in chief, formalizes his abdication Wednesday, leading to the proclamation of his son, Crown Prince Felipe, 46, as the new King, in a nation where the elected government runs the country.
The new King and his wife, Princess Letizia, who will become queen of Spain, are due to ride through the streets, from Parliament to the royal palace, and city officials have urged Spaniards to turn out for the parade and to hang Spanish flags from their homes.