National Post (National Edition)

Inmate on leave kills three in Belgium

- Lorne Cook and Sylvain Plazy

LIEGE, BELGIUM • A knife-wielding prison inmate stabbed two female police officers in the Belgian city of Liege, stole their service weapons and shot them and a bystander dead in an attack Tuesday that prosecutor­s fear could be terror-related.

Justice Minister Koen Geens said the assailant, who was later killed by police, was on a two-day leave from prison. Geens described him as a repeat offender who had been incarcerat­ed since 2003 and was due for release in two years.

The attack happened outside a Liege café on Tuesday morning. Liege prosecutor­s’ spokesman Philippe Dulieu said the man crept up on the two officers from behind carrying a knife and stabbed them several times.

“He then took their weapons. He used the weapons on the officers, who died,” Dulieu told reporters. The two police handguns had a total of 17 bullets.

Dulieu said the attacker then shot and killed a 22-year-old man in a vehicle that was leaving a parking space outside a nearby high school. He then took two women hostage inside the school.

“Liege police intervened. He came out firing at police, wounding a number of them, notably in the legs. He was shot dead,” the spokesman said.

Police Chief Christian Beaupere said the slain officers were 45-years-old and 53-years-old, the latter the mother of twins. Four other officers were wounded in the attack, one of them seriously with a severed femoral artery.

“The goal of the attacker was to target the police,” Beaupere said.

Belgian media identified the suspect as Benjamin Herman; a Belgian national born in 1982 who had a criminal record that included theft, assault and drug offences, state broadcaste­r RTBF reported.

Belgian Prime Minister Michel says Herman was indirectly mentioned in state security reports on radicaliza­tion, “in notes that did not primarily target him, but others or other situations.”

The prime minister says Herman did not have his name on a list maintained by an anti-terror assessment group.

Asked about reports that Herman had been radicalize­d in prison, Geens said “at the moment there is very little consistent we can say about that.”

“In any case, he is not a clear-cut case, on the contrary,” Geens said. “He certainly was not someone who could clearly be qualified as radicalize­d. Otherwise he would have been known as such by all services.”

But a senior official at the federal prosecutor’s office told The Associated Press that “there are indication­s it could be a terror attack.”

Belgian police and military have been on alert since suicide bombers killed 32 people at the Brussels airport and subway system in 2016

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