Khaleej Times

Shootout in Brussels suburbs

Wounded suspect captured alive; 10 suspects nabbed across Europe in crackdown Kerry says ‘Je suis Bruxellois’

- — Reuters — AFP

brussels — Belgian police captured a suspect carrying what a broadcaste­r said was a suitcase full of explosives on Friday, after shooting him in the leg during a major police operation following Tuesday’s suicide bombings in Brussels.

The federal prosecutor’s office said the arrest was one of three in Brussels on Friday linked to the arrest in Paris the previous day of an militant convicted in Belgium last year and suspected of plotting a new attack.

Nine people in total were arrested since Thursday in Belgium and two in Germany, as European authoritie­s have swooped on militants they link both to the Brussels attacks that killed 31 people and to attacks in Paris last November that killed 130.

Heavily armed police and troops with trucks cordoned off an area around a major intersecti­on in the northern Brussels borough of Schaerbeek. Three blasts could be heard, which the local mayor Bernard Clerfayt said were controlled explosions.

Belgian public broadcaste­r RTBF quoted Clerfayt as saying the suspect was detained after being wounded and that he was linked to Tuesday’s suicide bombings in Brussels. It said he had been found to be in possession of a suitcase full of explosives.

Witnesses told local media police had shot the man in the leg at a tram stop after he failed to respond to their orders. One witness told RTBF the man had a girl of about eight with him.

“I heard two explosions, they were shooting. I opened the window and saw a man lying near the tram stop. The police ordered him to show his hands, remove his jacket. They said that if he did not comply, they would use their weapons,” a witness who lives nearby told La Libre newspaper.

Video from the scene showed the man lying on his side, shattered glass from the tram shelter smashed by bullets at his feet. A bomb squad robot approached the wounded man, checking for explosives.

Suicide bombers hit Brussels airport and a metro train on Tuesday in the worst such attack in Belgian history. Investigat­ors believe those attacks were carried out by the same cell responsibl­e for November’s gun and bomb attacks in Paris.

The Belgian federal prosecutor’s office said six people were held in Brussels on Thursday, of whom three were released and three were remanded in custody facing possible charges.

Three others were detained on Friday following the arrest in France of Reda Kriket, a 34-yearold Frenchman sentenced to 10 years in Brussels in absentia in July as part of a recruiting network dubbed the Syrian Connection.

Germany’s Der Spiegel magazine said German police had arrested two people, one of whom had received phone messages with the name of the metro station bomber and the word ‘fin’ — French for ‘end’ — three minutes before the metro blast. The German interior ministry declined immediate comment.

A person familiar with the investigat­ion in Belgium said one of the people arrested there was believed to be a suspected accomplice caught on security camera footage with the metro station bomber.

“We have strong indication­s that this is the suspect who was hunted for the last couple of days. The identifica­tion is still ongoing,” the source said. However he said those arrested before midday on Friday did not include a third suspect seen on video alongside the two who blew themselves up at the airport.

The attacks in Brussels, home to the European Union and NATO, have heightened security concerns around the world and raised questions about EU states’ ability to respond in an effective, coordinate­d way to the militant threat. brussels — US Secretary of State John Kerry on Friday declared “Je suis Bruxellois” — “I am a citizen of Brussels” — in support for the people of the Belgian capital, echoing their backing for the United States after the 9/11 terror attacks.

“Then, voices across Europe declared, ‘Je suis Americain.’ Now, we declare, ‘Je suis Bruxellois’ and ‘Ik ben Brussel’,” Kerry said in French and Dutch, the country’s two main languages, after meeting Belgian Premier Charles Michel.

Kerry said a number of Americans were among the dead in Tuesday’s bomb attacks on Brussels airport and the metro system.

“The United States is praying and grieving with you for the loved ones of those cruelly taken from us, including Americans, and for the many who were injured in these despicable attacks,” Kerry said.

 ?? AP ?? A couple embrace in front of tributes placed in a memorial for victims of the recent attacks on Brussels at the Place de la Bourse in Brussels on Friday. —
AP A couple embrace in front of tributes placed in a memorial for victims of the recent attacks on Brussels at the Place de la Bourse in Brussels on Friday. —

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