Austrian police seize a massive cache of explosives planned for German extremists

Austria's Interior Minister Karl Nehammer speaks during a news conference at the Interior Ministry after exchanges of gunfire in Vienna, Austria

Austrian police seized a massive cache of explosives, automatic weapons, and hand grenades intended to arm extremist groups in Germany, Interior Minister Karl Nehammer said on Saturday.

Five people were arrested following a series of house searches, Nehammer told a press conference in Vienna. “We have struck a massive blow against the right-wing extremist scene in Austria and organized crime, and how they are connected,” Nehammer told reporters.

The group had built up the arsenal to attack society, democracy, and fundamental freedoms, Nehammer added.

The raids were carried out as part of an investigation initially into drug-related crime, but officers also uncovered links between far-right groups and organised crime, the minister said.

The network was active in Germany, with Bavaria and North Rhine-Westphalia officers involved in the inquiry.

The raids led to the seizure of 25 semi-automatic and fully automatic weapons, believed to have been bought with the proceeds of drug trafficking, said Michael Mimra from the state criminal police office in Vienna.

The haul included Uzi sub-machine guns, AK-47 assault rifles, Scorpion machine guns, and ammunition, Mimra said.

More weapons and ammunition were seized on Thursday, while more than 100,000 rounds of ammunition were found in a warehouse in lower Austria.

Overall 76 automatic and semi-automatic weapons were recovered, along with 14 handguns and ammunition and six hand-grenades, as well as detonators and explosives. Some had been packed for transportation.

Meanwhile, investigators in Germany had led to two arrests and the seizure of a large number of drugs, Mimra said.

Investigators are now trying to establish the origin of the weapons, with forensic examinations underway to see if they have been used in crimes. “The investigation has only just begun,” Mimra said. “It will last a while.”

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