The head of Denmark's primary security agency, Finn Andersen, said it’s not a likely route for jihadists to infiltrate the kingdom, according to intelligence.
“Based on the intelligence we have, we don’t believe that organized militant groups will use human smugglers or refugee routes in an attempt to get terrorists into Denmark – simply because the route is not desirable,” Andersen said at a press conference this week, as cited by TheLocal.dk.
According to the Danish police intelligence service, the majority of refugees are actually fleeing from warring Islamist groups and, as a consequence, they are unlikely to feel sympathy either with ISIL or other terrorist organizations.
However, PET does not fully rule out a possibility that ISIL sympathizers are coming with the refugees.
“But it of course cannot be rejected that among the refugees will be individuals who sympathize with Islamic propaganda,” Andersen noted.
Neighboring Norway isn't too worried about Islamic terrorists sneaking into the country, but about the surge of far-right domestic extremism caused by the arrival of a large number of refugees, a recent report by the Norwegian Police Security Service (PST) exposed.
Media reports and statements by officials on Islamic State terrorists arriving to Europe under the guise of refugees are a sign of anti-migrant hysteria, a founding member of the UK No One Is Illegal advocacy group told Sputnik earlier this month.
In the beginning of September, media reported citing an unnamed ISIL operative that 4,000 covert ISIL terrorists had arrived to several European countries under the guise of migrants.
“I don't think anyone has ever managed to produce an example of a terrorist who had previously been a refugee or asylum seeker. If such a person had ever actually existed, their pictures would have been all over the right-wing media for weeks… Their present source, “a jihadist”, sounds as fishy as earlier sensational efforts,” Bob Hughes said.
German authorities are currently investigating a Syrian asylum seeker who boasted to roommates that he was a member of the terrorist organization Islamic State, according to an earlier report in Welt am Sonntag.
The French press also reported recently that police in Calais were searching for a suspected ISIL terrorist who could be hiding in the port's so-called 'Jungle Camp'. According to La Voix du Nord newspaper the 'lone wolf' extremists left Syria and traveled overland to France.
Europe is currently experiencing a large-scale migration crisis, as thousands of refugees attempt to cross into the bloc.
The majority of migrants entering Europe come from crisis-torn countries in North Africa and the Middle East, where radical Islamist groups, such as ISIL, have been on the rise.