Serbian police arrest man carrying Syrian passport with exact same details as document found on Paris bomber

The two passports were almost certainly produced by the same forger in Turkey, officials say

Adam Withnall
Monday 16 November 2015 15:53 GMT
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A passport belonging to Ahmad Almohammad was found on the body of a suicide bomber
A passport belonging to Ahmad Almohammad was found on the body of a suicide bomber

A man has been detained in Serbia after he was found carrying a Syrian passport matching the same details as one found near the body of one of the Paris suicide bombers.

The document also carried the details of 25-year-old Almohammad Ahmad but with a different photograph to the one found on Friday.

It raises already serious concerns that the passport used to identify one of the attackers as a “refugee terrorist” was faked.

Whether the man who blew himself up outside the Stade de France did indeed travel through Greece and Macedonia, as the passport suggests, remains unclear.

Greek authorities have said they took the passport-holder’s fingerprints and photo when he was registered there on the 3 October, and it is now up to the French authorities to match them to one of the attackers’ bodies.

But according to the Serbian daily Blic, the existence of the second passport with the same data means “it is likely that the two men separately purchased false Syrian passports at the same forger in Turkey”.

The name itself, Almohammad Ahmad, is unknown to the French anti-terror authorities, and officials have been careful not to draw conclusions from the passport found at the bomb site in Paris.

UN: Security Council observes minute of silence to honour victims in Paris and Beirut

Media outlets, however, have drawn attention to the fact that one of the bombers may have entered Europe on a refugee boat, and the far-right leader Marine le Pen has called on France to stop its refugee intake with immediate effect.

On Sunday, the European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker urged political leaders not to be put off the programme already agreed for taking in more of those genuinely fleeing conflict.

Those who attacked Paris were “criminals”, Mr Juncker said at the G20 summit in Turkey, “not refugees, not asylum seekers”.

“Those who organised these attacks and those that perpetrated them are exactly those that the refugees are fleeing and not the opposite,” he said.

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