In the counter-terrorist microscope has entered the apartment building, where weapons, grenades and explosives were found, while authorities check whether the yafka in the neighborhood of Pancratius may be related to the explosion in the Abelocides. Anti-terror investigations focus on the warehouse tenant in Pagkrati, who in 2008 had rented the site from the retired military. It is noted that the first information reported that the owner did not remember who had rented the space in the basement of the apartment building. It is worth noting that everything was revealed when the owner decided to rerent the warehouse in Pagrati. He arrived at the apartment building with his wife and after breaking the lock with a chainsaw they found it was full of guns and explosives. Police officers analyze the arsenal found in the warehouse with explosives referring to terrorist organizations from the old days. Anti-terrorist research focuses on the analysis of digital evidence as the yafka has found a laptop being examined in order for authorities to gain access to the files. It is assumed that the computer belongs to members of a terrorist organization that had leased the warehouse since 2008. According to the ERT, the findings awaken memories of terrorist attacks made by organizations that have either been “disabled”, or have been dismantled like the Revolutionary Struggle, the People’s Fight Group and the Fire Cell Conspiracy. In this direction research leads to 37 kg of ammonia nitrate, a key component for creating an explosive that has been used in major hits. A similar component also contained the bomb that exploded in the Vineyard apartment where a 36-year-old man died and a girl was seriously injured. Finally, authorities do ballistic tests on weapons that are fully operational and consider whether they have been used in some criminal action. Police speculate that the yafka warehouse was related to a previous generation of terrorists and there is no way any of them could have taken on a role as a guide in the new generation.
Pagkrati: Looking for the 2008 tenant for the “yafka” warehouse
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in Greece