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Geneva raises alert level over search for suspected jihadists

Security forces stand guard at the entrance of the United Nations headquarters in Geneva
Security forces stand guard at the entrance of the United Nations headquarters in Geneva

Police in Geneva have raised the alert level and searched the city for several suspected jihadists believed to have links to the so-called Islamic State (IS) group, security sources said.

A statement from the Canton of Geneva's security department said it had received information yesterday from Swiss federal authorities concerning "suspicious individuals likely to be in Geneva or the Geneva area".

Police were "actively looking" for these individuals "in the context of the investigation following the Paris attacks", the statement said, while reinforcements were deployed at key locations including United Nations buildings.

"We went from a vague threat to a specific threat," Geneva security spokeswoman Emmanuelle Lo Verso said, adding that the search for the suspects was at "a very active phase".

A security source at the UN complex in Geneva said that the search was for four people with possible ties to IS, which claimed the attacks that killed 130 people in Paris last month.

The individuals are not believed to have any direct link to the Paris atrocities.

The UN source said the Palais des Nations - the UN's European headquarters - was evacuated last night as security personnel conducted office-to-office searches.

Security guards posted at the UN gates were also carrying sub-machine guns today, a departure from normal practice.

The statement from Geneva's government said police "have increased their level of vigilance", while the ATS news agency reported that security reinforcements were being deployed at key buildings around the city, including the headquarters of major international organisations and the airport.

Geneva is just over 500 kms from Paris and the Swiss city is almost entirely enclosed by France, with border crossings often unmanned.

Police in the two French regions bordering Geneva - Ain and Haute-Savoie - said that controls had been beefed up at all crossings.

"The police, the gendarmes and the customs officers are on the ground and are reinforcing their inspections," said a police spokesman in Ain, with similar comments from an official in Haute-Savoie.

Last month, French police searched the homes of two imams from Geneva's main mosque, which is just metres from the UN complex.

The imams reportedly live in the French border town of Ferney-Voltaire.

Swiss media reports said leaders at the mosque had been preaching extremist ideology, but there was no indication from police that the two imams were implicated in any wrongdoing.

The searches in Geneva, though apparently not directly linked to the Paris attacks, come amid widening investigations across Europe into possible IS sympathisers.

Switzerland said last month that it had active criminal proceedings against 33 individuals over suspected ties to extremist Islamist groups, but only three people were in custody.

The most serious case involves a cell of possible Islamist radicals uncovered in the Canton of Schaffhausen, near the German border, last year.