March 17, 2016 - 09:34 AMT
France arrests 4 suspected of plotting terror attacks

Four people have been arrested in the Paris area as part of a wider investigation into a possible plot to attack France, officials said, according to BBC News.

Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said police had information to suggest one of those arrested "could undertake violent actions in France". But he played down French media reports that an attack was imminent.

France remains on high alert after the jihadist attacks in Paris in November that killed 130 people. More than 100 people were wounded in a series of shootings and suicide bombings that targeted a concert hall, major stadium, restaurants and bars over the course of a Friday evening. The so-called Islamic State (IS) group said it was behind the attacks.

French media reported that three men and a woman were detained at dawn in the 18th arrondissement of Paris and the nearby northern department of Seine-Saint-Denis. They said at least one of those arrested had a prior conviction and had been under house arrest since last month, under new rules imposed after the November attacks.

Cazeneuve said: "We have information about one person that suggests that he could undertake violent actions in France. This man could have been in contact with people in Syria and members of Islamic State. This person was arrested this morning along with three persons linked with him, and checks are underway."

But he warned people "to remain extremely cautious regarding some information on a planned and imminent violent action. We arrest people every day."

The Paris prosecutor's office said computer equipment seized during the dawn arrests would be analyzed.

The arrests come a day after French police officers, alongside Belgian officers, were involved in a raid on a house in Brussels that ended in a shoot-out with at least two suspects. One of the suspects was killed, and later identified as Algerian national Mohamed Belkaid. His body was found alongside Salafist (ultra-conservative Islamic) literature and Kalashnikov ammunition, prosecutors said.

Photo: Parismatch