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Far-left fugitive Daniela Klette is arrested in Germany after 30 years on the run: 'Red Army Faction militant', 65, is held in Berlin decades after anti-capitalist group's campaign of violence left dozens dead

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Far left fugitive Daniela Klette, a former member of the notorious Red Army Faction group which left dozens dead in a long campaign of violence, has been arrested in Germany after 30 years on the run.

The 65-year-old was one of Europe's most wanted people and was among a long-sought trio from the radical anti-capitalist group, which was also known as the Baader Meinhof gang.

The group carried out several bombings, kidnappings and killings that traumatised Germany in the 1970s and 1980s, leaving 34 people dead and hundreds injured.

Since it disbanded in 1998, Klette and fellow gang members Ernst-Volker Staub and Burkhard Garweg are believed to have been financing their lives on the run through robberies of money transporters and supermarket cash heists.

Klette, the only woman tagged as 'dangerous' on Europol's most-wanted list, was arrested on Monday in the German capital on suspicion of attempted murder and various serious robberies between 1999 and 2016, prosecutors in Verden said.

A 1988 portrait of RAF member Daniela Klette, handed out by German police in 1993

A 1988 portrait of RAF member Daniela Klette, handed out by German police in 1993

Police officers stand in front of a building believed to be the site where a German activist of the notorious far-left Red Army Faction (RAF) has been arrested in Berlin

Police officers stand in front of a building believed to be the site where a German activist of the notorious far-left Red Army Faction (RAF) has been arrested in Berlin

Police officers stand at the entrance of the district court, in Verden, Germany

Police officers stand at the entrance of the district court, in Verden, Germany

Investigators carry boxes as they exit the building where former RAF member Daniela Klette was arrested in Berlin

Investigators carry boxes as they exit the building where former RAF member Daniela Klette was arrested in Berlin

Police officers carry paper bags out of a residential building where former RAF terrorist Daniela Klette was arrested in Berlin, Germany, 27 February 2024

Police officers carry paper bags out of a residential building where former RAF terrorist Daniela Klette was arrested in Berlin, Germany, 27 February 2024

The suspect showed no resistance as she was detained at an apartment in the city's Kreuzberg district after being identified via fingerprints, said Hanover police chief Friedo de Vries.

Police found two pistol magazines as well as cartridges in the apartment, de Vries said.

Daniela Behrens, interior minister for the state of Lower Saxony, described the arrest as a 'milestone in German criminal history'.

Klette had been in hiding in Berlin for 20 years, according to the Bild newspaper.

Neighbours told the popular daily she went by the name of Claudia, had a partner about the same age as her and always said 'hello' when she went out walking with her dog.

A steady flow of police officers were still coming and going from the building on Tuesday afternoon.

Shop assistant Karina Ziegler, 46, said she was 'surprised' to see the crowds of officers two blocks down from her workplace this morning on what had begun as 'a completely normal day'.

The anti-capitalist RAF emerged out of the radicalised fringe of the 1960s student protest movement.

Undated police handout picture shows what is believed to be Burkhard Garweg
Undated picture shows what is believed to be Ernst-Volker Staub

Undated handout pictures released by the State Office of Criminal Investigations Lower Saxony shows what is believed to be Burkhard Garweg and Ernst-Volker Staub

This undated handout picture released by the State Office of Criminal Investigations Lower Saxony shows what is believed to be Daniela Klette

This undated handout picture released by the State Office of Criminal Investigations Lower Saxony shows what is believed to be Daniela Klette

Named the Baader Meinhof gang after two of its early leaders, Andreas Baader and Ulrike Meinhof, the group took up arms against what they saw as US imperialism and a 'fascist' German state that was still riddled with former Nazis.

At the height of its notoriety in 1977, the group shot dead a German bank chief and kidnapped and killed industrialist Hanns Martin Schleyer - a former SS officer.

Palestinians with ties to the gang also hijacked a Lufthansa airliner.

Though the so-called German Autumn of 1977 marked the beginning of a long period of decline for the RAF, the group continued to operate for another two decades.

Staub, Garweg and Klette, alleged members of the RAF's so-called 'third generation' active during the 1980s and 1990s, are the chief suspects in a 1993 explosives attack against a prison under construction in Germany's Hesse state.

In the attack, five RAF members climbed the prison walls, tied up and abducted the guards in a van, then returned to set off explosions that caused about 600,000 euros worth of property damage, according to German prosecutors.

The so-called third generation was also behind a bomb attack on the former Deutsche Bank boss Alfred Herrhausen as well as attacks on US military facilities in Germany.

Klette is also believed to have been involved in an RAF attack on the US embassy in Bonn, the German capital at the time, in 1991.

However, Tuesday's arrest is related to more recent crimes.

Klette and her two accomplices are suspected of being behind the failed robbery of a money transporter in 2016 near the northern city of Bremen, among other offences.

In that incident, masked attackers armed with AK-47 automatic rifles and a grenade-launcher opened fire but fled without cash when security guards locked themselves inside the armoured vehicle, which was carrying about one million euros ($1.1 million).

Prosecutor Clemens Eimterbaeumer said 'further investigative work' would be carried out to establish whether there are 'any connections that we can now follow up from Ms Klette to the other wanted persons'.

Investigators on Tuesday said a second arrest had been made in connection with the case. The detained suspect is male, and of the age range of the two remaining fugitives, police said, declining to give further details.

Police officers carry paper bags as they pass under crime-scene tape in front of the entrance to a house in Berlin, where Klette is believed to have been arrested

Police officers carry paper bags as they pass under crime-scene tape in front of the entrance to a house in Berlin, where Klette is believed to have been arrested

Wanted photos (top) and aging-simulation images (bottom) of (L-R) Burkhard Garweg, Ernst-Volker Wilhelm Staub and Daniela Klette, members of the now disbanded terrorist organisation RAF (Rote Armee Fraktion, Red Army Faction)

Wanted photos (top) and aging-simulation images (bottom) of (L-R) Burkhard Garweg, Ernst-Volker Wilhelm Staub and Daniela Klette, members of the now disbanded terrorist organisation RAF (Rote Armee Fraktion, Red Army Faction)

Ten days ago, an alarm was raised in Wuppertal when a man on a regional train was mistaken for Staub, 69.

However, it turned out to be a case of mistaken identity, and he and Garweg, 55, remain on the run.

Europe's 'years of lead': 1970s left-wing guerrilla groups 

The Red Army Faction (RAF), also known as the Baader-Meinhof gang after founders Andreas Baader and Ulrike Meinhof, carried out kidnappings and murders of prominent figures in West Germany in the 1970s and early 1980s.

The outfit, founded in 1970, said it was fighting an oppressive capitalist state and US imperialism.

Its most high-profile victim was Hanns Martin Schleyer, head of the German employers' federation, who was kidnapped and shot dead in 1977.

Around the same time four militants of the RAF-allied Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine hijacked Mallorca-Frankfurt flight LH 181, demanding the release of 11 RAF members.

During a five-day odyssey which included seven refuelling stops in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, the pilot was shot dead.

German anti-terror commandos stormed the jet in Somalia, shot and killed three of the Palestinian hijackers and freed 90 hostages.

Members of the group also assassinated diplomat Gerold von Braunmuehl in 1986, and Deutsche Bank chairman, Alfred Herrhausen, in 1989.

Believed to have killed a total of 34 people, the group abandoned violence in 1992 and formally disbanded in 1998.

Italy 

Italy had the Red Brigades, a radical Marxist organisation responsible for attacks between 1969 and 1980, dubbed Italy's 'Years of Lead'.

Founded by sociologist Renato Curcio, the group killed or wounded dozens of magistrates, politicians, journalists and industrialists.

Their most notorious act was the kidnapping and assassination of former prime minister Aldo Moro in 1978.

Several former Red Brigades members fled to France and their fate has been a sticking point between the two countries.

Italy said they must serve sentences dating back decades but in March 2023 France's top court ruled out extraditing them.

France 

The Marxist Action Directe group carried out attacks in France in the 1980s, including the abduction and murder of Georges Besse, head of the state car manufacturer Renault, in 1986.

Founded in 1979, it targeted executives and political and business buildings. In the early years, the attacks chiefly caused damage to property, but between 1983 and 1986 the group killed three police officers.

It disbanded in 1987 after the arrest of four members.

Spain

Grapo, which stands for First of October Anti-Fascist Resistance Group, was founded in 1975 a few months before the death of Spanish dictator Francisco Franco.

A Marxist organisation which Spanish authorities blame for some 80 killings between 1975 and 2003, it targeted temporary-hire agencies in the belief they were creations of capitalist exploitation.

One of its deadliest attacks left eight dead in a Madrid restaurant in 1979. It also staged kidnappings.

In 2007 Spain announced it had dismantled the "last operational commando" after the arrest of six members in Barcelona.

Greece

Greece's deadliest left-wing extremist group, November 17, was named after the date of a 1973 student uprising crushed by the military dictatorship then in power.

Emerging in 1975, the group killed 23 people - including a CIA station chief, US army staff, Greek police, business executives and a British defence attache - before being broken up in 2002.

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