German authorities arrest Syrian terror seeking ingredients to make the explosive TAPT

Special federal police units detained a Syrian man
in his Berlin apartment early Tuesday on a charge of preparing a text aimed at
perpetrating a terror act endangering the state, prosecutors said.
Federal prosecutors said the suspect had begun to
procure the "requisite components and chemicals for the construction of an
explosive device" with the intention of killing as many people as
possible.
"This was intended for detonation at an unknown
point in time and at an unknown location in Germany," they added.
In August he had purchased hydrogen peroxide and
acetone — two chemicals used to synthesize the high explosive TATP.
Berlin prosecutors said that since early 2019, the
Syrian had been observed nine times in an electronic message group affiliated
with the terror militia "Islamic State" (IS).
Topics had included instructions on plastic
explosives, packet and magnet bombs, and booby trap-explosives, followed by
Kalashnikov K-47 guns and machine pistols.
German public broadcaster ARD said initial tips had
been given by an unidentified foreign secret service to Germany's domestic
intelligence agency (BfV).
The suspect was employed as a cleaner at one of
Berlin's primary schools and had been under observation since early this year,
according to Berlin city-state's interior senator Andreas Geisel.
The Berliner Zeitung daily said the suspect lived
near the town hall in Berlin's district of Schöneberg.
Before working at the school, he had been employed
at Berlin's renowned Bode Museum.