France said Tuesday one of its nationals had been arrested in Lebanon on suspicion of planning an attack under what a Lebanese newspaper claimed was the influence of the ISIL jihadist group sweeping through Iraq.
Lebanese security forces announced Friday they had detained 17 people at the Napoleon Hotel in Beirut's Hamra area following a tip-off that attacks by a "terrorist group" were being planned in the capital and other parts of the country.
A Lebanese judicial source told Agence France Presse Monday that all had been released except a Frenchman originally from the Comoros islands in the Indian Ocean.
French foreign ministry spokesman Romain Nadal confirmed Tuesday that "a French national was arrested in Beirut."
According to the al-Akhbar newspaper, the suspect was part of a group of four would-be suicide bombers who had come to Lebanon.
The daily said he had admitted coming to the country with a view of committing a suicide attack under the influence of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), which has overrun major areas of five provinces in Iraq and is currently pressing onto Baghdad.
It said that another of the four may have been behind a suicide attack that actually took place in the Dahr al-Baydar area in east Lebanon on Friday, killing one person and wounding at least 30 others.
The French government is deeply concerned about the radicalization of its nationals after several citizens have gone to fight with jihadists in Syria, where ISIL is very powerful.
It unveiled an anti-terrorism plan in April to prevent radicalization, thwart online recruitment and make it more difficult for aspiring jihadists to leave the country.
Since then, authorities have arrested a French suspect called Medhi Nemmouche suspected of carrying out the Brussels Jewish Museum killings last month after spending a year fighting in Syria.
They have also deported a Tunisian accused of recruiting young jihadists to fight in Syria.
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