European among 5 detained in Malaysia over Daesh links
Two of the men accused of being part of Daesh-linked cell tasked with recruiting volunteers to take part in militant activities overseas
Malaysian police have detained five people -- including a European teacher -- on suspicion of links with Daesh and Al-Qaeda militant groups.
Inspector-General Khalid Abu Bakar said Saturday that the European was arrested in Island state Penang while working as a part-time English tutor.
"He had joined al-Qaeda previously and was involved in terror activities in Afghanistan and Bosnia," Bakar said in a statement.
Four of the detainees were foreign nationals, while one was a Malaysian.
The Indonesian and Malaysian are "suspected of acting as facilitator to organize individuals from Malaysia and some Southeast Asian countries to join the Islamic State in Syria," using an alternative acronym for Daesh.
The statement said that the suspects -- all men -- were detained in five separate operations by the police's counter-terrorism unit between Nov. 17 to Dec. 1 in five different states nationwide.
All will be investigated under the Security Offences Act ( Special Measures) 2012 (Act 747) and the Immigration Act 1959/63.
Malaysia is on alert after Thai police confirmed Friday that the Russian intelligence service had warned of a possible attack on Russian assets in Thailand -- Malaysia's southern neighbor -- by Daesh-linked militants.
The previously unconfirmed memo had asked police to investigate claims that ten Syrian nationals with links to Daesh had entered Thailand with the intention of carrying out attacks on Russians in the popular tourist resorts of Pattaya and Phuket.
Malaysia has detained more than 130 people suspected of links with Daesh or other militant groups since last year.
In April, the Home Ministry formulated new anti-terror laws that will reintroduce indefinite detention without trial and allow the seizure of passports of anyone suspected of supporting terror acts in a bid to curb suspected militant activities in the country.
The controversial National Security Council Bill (NSC) -- which grants Prime Minister Najib Razak supreme security powers -- was approved in parliament late Thursday despite strong protests from opposition MPs and civil society groups.