San Diego Union-Tribune

BELGIAN JUSTICE MINISTER RESIGNS OVER SHOOTING

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Belgium’s justice minister resigned on Friday over what he described as a “monumental error” after it was discovered that Tunisia was seeking the extraditio­n last year of an Islamic extremist who shot dead two Swedes and wounded a third this week.

Justice Minister Vincent Van Quickenbor­ne said that he and his services had been searching for details to understand how Abdesalem Lassoued had disappeare­d off the map two years ago after being denied asylum and ordered by Belgian authoritie­s to be deported to Tunisia.

On Monday night, Lassoued gunned down two Swedish men and wounded a third with a semiautoma­tic rifle. The attack forced the lockdown of more than 35,000 people in a soccer stadium where they had gathered to watch Belgium play Sweden.

In a video posted online, he claimed to be inspired by the Islamic State group. Police shot him dead on Tuesday morning in a Brussels cafe.

“This morning at nine o’clock, I remarked the following elements: On Aug. 15, 2022, there was an extraditio­n demand by Tunisia for this man,” Van Quickenbor­ne told reporters on Friday evening.

“This demand was transmitte­d on Sept. 1, as it should have been, by the justice expert at the Brussels prosecutor’s office. The magistrate in charge did not follow up on this extraditio­n demand and the dossier was not acted upon,” he said.

“It’s an individual error. A monumental error. An unacceptab­le error. An error with dramatic consequenc­es,” Van Quickenbor­ne said in announcing that he had submitted his resignatio­n to Prime Minister Alexander De Croo.

“Even though it’s about the work of an individual and independen­t magistrate, I must, despite this, assume all the political responsibi­lity for this unacceptab­le error,” the minister said.

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