San Francisco Chronicle

Terrorism: Authoritie­s search for mystery man in attack on Brussels Airport.

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BRUSSELS — As the number of victims in the Brussels suicide attacks rose to 35, Belgian police released a video of a mysterious man in a dark hat seen in the company of the bombers who attacked Brussels Airport, indicating that he is still at large.

“Police are seeking to identify this man,” the Belgian Federal Police’s website said Monday.

The video’s release came as a Belgian magistrate also ruled that a man identified as Faycal C., who was arrested during the police raids that followed the March 22 attacks, could be released.

Faycal C. was among those taken into custody and facing preliminar­y terror charges. Belgian media had claimed the man was the mysterious suspect in the white jacket and dark hat spotted with the two bombers at the airport the morning of the attacks.

But the Belgian magistrate ruled that new evidence uncovered by investigat­ors revealed there were no grounds to keep Faycal C. in custody and he was released, the Belgian Federal Prosecutor’s Office said.

The Belgian Federal Police’s website posted a 32- second video of the still- unidentifi­ed suspect as he wheels baggage through the terminal alongside the bombers.

Tensions remain high in the city, particular­ly in the Brussels suburb of Molenbeek, where several of those involved in both the attacks on Brussels and those in Paris last November, hailed from.

Jamal Ikazban, a member of the Molenbeek council, tweeted Monday that young people in the neighborho­od were being sent text messages by recruiters. Ikazban did not provide further details, beyond writing that “We must ensure these recruiters can do no more damage.”

Belgian authoritie­s also announced that three more people swept up in police raids that followed the attacks on the airport and on a Brussels subway train were being held on charges of participat­ing in terrorist activities.

It was not clear if the suspects ordered held by an investigat­ing judge were linked to the attacks themselves. The three — identified by Belgian prosecutor­s as Yassine A., Mohamed B. and Aboubaker O. — were detained during 13 police searches Sunday in Brussels and the northern cities of Mechelen and Duffel.

The bombings, the bloodiest in recent Belgian history, were claimed by the Islamic State and confirmed Belgium’s status as an unwitting rear base from which Muslim extremists can stage attacks in Europe. Many of those responsibl­e for the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris that killed 130 people and wounded hundreds came from Belgium.

Four more people wounded in the Brussels attacks died in the hospital, Belgian Health Minister Maggie De Block announced on her Twitter account Monday.

De Block had reported over the weekend that 101 of the 270 wounded in the blasts were still being treated in hospitals, including 32 in burn units. A doctor at one of those burn units who had once served in Afghanista­n described patients’ wounds as shocking.

 ?? Daniel Berehulak / New York Times ?? Soldiers patrol Grand Place in Brussels near Place de la Bourse, where people continue to gather at a makeshift memorial for victims of the Brussels bombing attacks on March 22.
Daniel Berehulak / New York Times Soldiers patrol Grand Place in Brussels near Place de la Bourse, where people continue to gather at a makeshift memorial for victims of the Brussels bombing attacks on March 22.

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