Suspected bomber shot in Brussels rail station
No injuries reported from small explosion
BRUSSELS — Belgian troops shot a suspected suicide bomber in Brussels Central Station on Tuesday, but there were no other casualties and the situation was brought under control after people were evacuated, officials said.
A Reuters correspondent at the scene an hour after the incident — in which police said the man set off a small explosion —said the area was quiet, with police manning a cordon and a few bystanders calmly watching security forces.
Amid conflicting accounts of what happened, it was still unclear if the man had died. Paul de Vries, a Dutchman working in Brussels, told Reuters he saw police taking away a prisoner.
Nicolas Van Herrewegen, a station employee, told public broadcaster RTBF that he saw a man shouting in a lower level of the 1930s station. He then appeared to yell “Allahu Akbar” in Arabic and to detonate something on a luggage trolley. People standing within 3 meters of the trolley were unhurt, Herrewegen said.
Authorities were investigating whether it was a terrorist incident, a spokesman for the national Crisis Centre said. The national alert level was maintained at its second highest level.
The Belgian capital, home to the headquarters of NATO and the European Union, has been on high alert since a Brussels-based Islamic State cell launched an attack that killed 130 people in Paris in November 2015. Associates of those attackers, four months later, killed 32 people in their home city, including with bombs loaded on trolleys at Brussels Airport.
Combat troops have been a fixture at transport hubs and in the main public areas ever since the Paris attacks. A series of further attacks in neighboring France and Germany in the past year, as well as recent bloodshed in London and Manchester, have added to anxiety.