Two suspects believed to be members of a neo-Nazi terror cell involved in killing at least 10 people, mostly of Turkish and Greek origin, have been arrested, German prosecutors said. In a video which they apparently planned to send to German media outlets, the alleged terrorists claim to have killed eight ethnic Turks, one ethnic Greek and a police officer from 2000 to 2007, prosecutors said. The attacks occurred all over Germany and became known as the "Doener Murder Series." Until the arrests, police had not thought they were committed by the same people. The German magazine Der Spiegel reported that the right-wing extremists also claim in the video to be responsible for several bank robberies and a nail-bomb attack in Cologne in 2004, which hit a street with mostly Turkish and Kurdish residents. German Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich said Monday: "It looks like we are facing a new form of right-wing extremist terrorism." Authorities in the country have not previously believed there were active, organized right-wing terror cells operating in Germany, experts say. Germany's Federal Public Prosecutor's Office took charge of the investigation on Friday. Two of the alleged terrorists, identified as Uwe B. and Uwe M., were found dead in a burning motor home on November 4, the prosecutor general's office said. Their flatmate Beate Z. set off a bomb in the eastern German town of Zwickau and then fled, prosecutors said. Four days later she turned herself in to local ...