Agencja Gazeta / Reuters
Members of Poland's Internal Security Agency (AWB) and the Prosecutors Office sit in front of a screen showing evidence of a planned attack, during a news conference in Warsaw, Tuesday.
By Reuters
Polish officials said Tuesday they had arrested a radical nationalist who planned to detonate a vehicle loaded with 4.4 tons of explosives outside parliament, possibly when the president and prime minister were in the building.?
Prosecutors said the man, a scientist who works for a university in the southern city of Krakow, had assembled a small arsenal of explosive material, guns and remote-controlled detonators and was trying to recruit others to help him.?
A video recording taken from the suspect showed what prosecutors said was a test explosion he conducted, leaving a large crater in the ground.?
'Anti-Semitic,' 'xenophobic' motives
Polish television, citing sources close to the investigation, said the suspect planned to copy methods used by Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people in bomb and gun attacks in Norway last year and said he was driven by far-right views.?
"The suspect does not belong to a political group or party. He claims that he was acting on nationalistic, anti-Semitic and xenophobic motives," prosecutor Piotr Krason told a news conference.?
"He carried out reconnaissance in the neighborhood of the Sejm (parliament). This building was to be the target of the attack. He collected explosives and materials for detonation," Krason said.?
?Norway massacre gunman Anders Breivik gets 21-year sentence
Poland has no experience of militant violence in its modern history. Society is though deeply polarized between supporters of liberal values and those who believe the country is neglecting its Catholic roots and succumbing to foreign influence.?
Agencja Gazeta / Reuters, file
File photo of the chamber of Parliament during the first session of the Polish Parliament in Warsaw November 8, 2011.
Earlier this month, a rally in Warsaw by right-wing nationalists turned violent, when youths in the crowd started throwing flares and stones at police.?
Earlier Tuesday, prosecutors said they had initiated legal proceedings against the bomb plot suspect on Nov. 5 and that Poland's Internal Security Agency would handle the case.?
"The case looks very serious," Pawel Gras, a government spokesman, told TOK FM radio station. "We know that the possible targets were to be the president, the parliament and the government."
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