Times Colonist

Machete attacker wounds two police in Belgium

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CHARLEROI, Belgium — Two female officers were attacked and wounded by a man wielding a machete and shouting “Allahu Akhbar” outside the main police station in the Belgian city of Charleroi on Saturday, police said.

The assailant was shot by a third officer and later died of his wounds, authoritie­s said. The attacker’s identity and motive were not immediatel­y known, Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel said, but added the “first indication­s” suggested it was an act of terrorism.

“Thoughts are with the victims, their relatives and police officers,” Michel posted on Twitter. The prime minister broke off his vacation in the south of France and was returning to Belgium for an emergency meeting of the government’s National Security Council today.

Michel told RTL television that he has also asked the independen­t OCAM agency to immediatel­y assess whether there is an increased threat to Belgian internal security. Belgium has been on high alert in the wake of the March 22 suicide bombings claimed by the Islamic State extremist group that killed 32 people in Brussels.

Charleroi police spokesman David Quinaux said Saturday’s attacker carried the weapon in a sports bag and pulled it out as he arrived at a security checkpoint outside police headquarte­rs in the southern Belgian city just before 4 p.m.

One of the two police, both of whom were described as experience­d law-enforcemen­t officers, received several deep slashing cuts to the face, Quinaux said. The other was slightly wounded.

Both officers are now “out of danger,” Charleroi police said Saturday evening on Twitter.

Belgian Interior Minister Jan Jambon said it wasn’t immediatel­y clear whether the assault, which he denounced as an “act of barbarism” was the deed of a single person or something more elaborate.

“We don’t know if this is the action of a lone wolf,” Jambon told RTL.

Belgium has been at Level 3 on a four-point terrorism alert scale since the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13 that killed 130 victims. Many of the Paris attackers, who pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group, lived in Belgium.

Last weekend, a 33-year-old man identified only as Nourredine H. was arrested on charges of participat­ing in a terrorist group and planning “terrorist murders” following searches in the city of Liege and the Mons region.

The attack Saturday took place near a wooden building that had been erected outside the Charleroi police station to provide an additional layer of security.

Paul Magnette, the city’s mayor, said the checkpoint succeeded in preventing the machetewie­lding man from reaching the building and causing more havoc. Magnette said that in the wake of the incident, Belgian authoritie­s have begun discussing whether security for police facilities and officers should be reinforced further.

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