Saturday Star

Paris attacks were partly planned in Brussels, say police

Hunt still on for key suspect as new clues are linked

- REUTERS

BELGIAN investigat­ors believe explosives used in the attacks in Paris in November may have been made in an apartment in Brussels that was rented under a false name and where a fingerprin­t of a key fugitive was found.

Police found material that could be used to make explosives, traces of explosive acetone peroxide and handmade belts during a raid on the apartment on December 10, federal prosecutor­s said in a statement yesterday.

Belgian newspaper De Standaard, which reported the raid yesterday, said the investigat­ors believed the explosives were probably packed into suicide belts in a hotel outside Paris in the lead-up to the November 13 attacks.

Prosecutor­s investigat­ing Belgian links to the Paris attacks said the apartment in the district of Schaerbeek had been rented under a false name that might have been used by a person already in custody in connection with the Paris attacks.

The find adds to indication­s that the November 13 shooting and suicide bomb attacks in Paris, in which 130 people were killed, were at least partially planned in Belgium.

Two of the attackers had been living in Brussels and Belgian authoritie­s have arrested 10 people.

Investigat­ors also found a fingerprin­t of Salah Abdeslam, the brother of one of the attackers, who retur ned from Paris the morning after the attacks and has still not been found.

Many of those arrested in Belgium have links to Abdeslam, including two who drove from Brussels hours after the attacks to pick him up and another who drove him from one part of Brussels to Schaerbeek after his return.

According to De Standaard, investigat­ors believe the fingerprin­t indicates Abdeslam used the flat as a safe house after the attacks.

Belgian media also said this week investigat­ors also now be- lieve that two men controlled the November 13 attacks by sending SMS text messages from Belgium during the evening.

Prosecutor­s appealed to the public for help on December 4 in the hunt for the two men, who travelled with Abdeslam to Hungary in September using fake identity cards with the names Samir Bouzid and Soufiane Kayal. Grainy images of their faces are shown on the federal police’s website. (http://www.police.be/fed/fr/ actualites/353-dossier-terrorisme-a-rechercher).

The two, clearly older than the attackers, are believed to have played a pivotal role, according to Belgian newspaper La Libre Belgique, in assuring logistics for the operation that was months in the planning.

The same false identity of Soufiane Kayal was used to rent a property in the Belgian town of Auvelais that possibly served as a safe house.

The other false identity card, for Samir Bouzid, was used four days after the attacks to transfer € 750 (R13 220) at a Western Union office in Brussels to Hasna Aitboulahc­en, who died in a police assault in St Denis on November 18.

Separately, federal prosecutor Frederic van Leeuw warned in an interview on broadcaste­r VTM late on Thursday that the January 15 anniversar­y of a foiled attack on Belgian soil could prompt someone to launch an attack in the country.

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? WANTED: Salah Abdeslam is being sought in connection with the November 13 attacks in Paris.
PICTURE: AP WANTED: Salah Abdeslam is being sought in connection with the November 13 attacks in Paris.

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