Khaleej Times

Laachraoui was a bright easy-going kid, recall kin

- AFP

brussels — Najim Laachraoui was a good student with an immaculate disciplina­ry record at a Brussels Catholic school, but grew up to become a Syria-hardened bomb-maker at the heart of the Brussels and Paris terror attacks.

The 24-year-old was one of two men who on Tuesday blew themselves up at Brussels airport — the day after police identified him as a suspected accomplice whose DNA was found on explosives used in the French capital in November.

But friends and family remember a bright easy-going kid who liked to play frisbee and football.

“I don’t understand how anyone can be brainwashe­d so quickly,” Brice Vanhee, a college friend from his first year electro-mechanical engineerin­g course in 2012, said on Facebook.

“How can you switch sides and blow yourself up when you used to play frisbee tournament­s every weekend? I don’t get it!”

A picture on Vanhee’s page shows a group of eight students including Laachraoui smiling at the camera from the steps of the Brussels Free University’s Polytechni­c school.

“He was in my study group, we’d see each other every week, he came to my flat. It never felt like he’d shoot me.”

University spokeswoma­n Valerie Bombaerts told AFP that Laachraoui completed his first year but “didn’t continue”.

Vanhee said the last time he saw him, at the end of the year, Laachraoui had said “Hi Brice, how goes it? I think I’m going to stop Polytech, it’s not my thing ... I’m probably going to do medicine instead.”

At the Catholic school where he completed his secondary studies in 2009 — the Sainte-Famille d’Helmet Institute in Brussels’ Schaerbeek district — headmistre­ss Veronica Pellegrini said “I don’t know what could’ve happened.”

“He was a good student with an immaculate disciplina­ry record,” she told AFP. “He never had to repeat a year.”

At a hastily-arranged press conference Thursday, his younger brother Mourad, a 20-year-old world-class Taekwondo champion, described a fairly normal young man and practising Muslim, whose radicalisa­tion shocked the family.

“He was a nice boy, and especially intelligen­t,” the younger brother said. “He played a bit of football, he read.”

His first-year university grades in 2012 were only fair however — “satisfacto­ry”, the lowest pass mark in Belgium — and the federal prosecutor’s office says he interrupte­d college to go to Syria in February 2013.

He disappeare­d from the family home in early 2013 after they moved house and called his parents by phone to say he was leaving for Syria. —

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