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Serbia arrests 11 accused of stirring Jewish-Muslim hate in France, Germany
Serbian police have arrested 11 people over hate-motivated acts in France and Germany, including defacing Jewish sites and placing pigs' heads near mosques, authorities said Monday.
A twelfth suspect, "currently on the run", is accused of training the group nationals on "the instructions of a foreign intelligence service", the Interior Ministry said in a statement, without specifying their nationality.
"Their objective was also to spread ideas advocating and inciting hatred, discrimination and violence based on differences," the statement said.
France has launched a series of investigations in recent years into acts of vandalism linked to foreign interference, with many observers pointing the finger at Moscow.
Those attacks have often targeted the country's significant Jewish and Muslim communities, at a time of heightened tensions over the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.
The heads of nine pigs, considered impure in Islam, were found in early September outside mosques in Paris and the surrounding region, sparking outrage and alarm over rising anti-Muslim hatred.
According to the ministry, between April and September, the group allegedly committed a number of attacks in Paris and its surroundings, including throwing green paint on the Holocaust Museum, several synagogues and a Jewish restaurant.
They also posted stickers with "genocidal" content and left pig heads near Muslim religious sites, some of which were tagged with French President Emmanuel Macron's name.
In Germany, "concrete skeletons" inscribed with messages were also left at the Brandenburg Gate.
France is home to the world's largest Jewish population outside Israel and the United States, as well as a substantial Muslim community sympathetic to the plight of the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.
Several EU nations have reported a spike in both anti-Muslim hatred and antisemitism since the beginning of the Israel-Hamas war in October 2023, according to the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights.
- 'Serve foreign power' -
Monday's statement said the group of 11 will be brought before the prosecutor on a range of offences, including racial discrimination and espionage.
They were arrested in Serbia's capital, Belgrade, and in Velika Plana, a town about 100 kilometres (60 miles) to the south, in coordination with the security services.
French investigators quickly identified a vehicle with Serbian license plates and a Croatian phone number linked to the crimes near the mosques.
Detectives are also probing posters that were plastered on the Arc de Triomphe in the same month, depicting a Russian soldier and the words "Say thank you to the victorious Soviet soldier".
The vandalism of the Holocaust Memorial, synagogues and a restaurant in late April led to the arrest and charging of three Serbs in France.
A French judicial source told AFP that they were suspected of committing the crimes "in order to serve the interests of a foreign power".
Belgrade has maintained close ties with Moscow in the wake of the 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
Several direct flights connect the two countries every day, and a large Russian diaspora has settled in Belgrade.
Serbia's President Aleksandar Vucic and other government officials have also visited Moscow since the invasion began.
T.Ibrahim--SF-PST