Las Vegas Review-Journal

Terrorism link in Belgium slayings

Furloughed inmate also tied to earlier homicide

- By Raf Casert and Lorne Cook The Associated Press

BRUSSELS — A Belgian prison inmate who killed four people while on furlough committed “terrorist murder” and likely intended to cause more harm, prosecutor­s said Wednesday as authoritie­s searched for possible accomplice­s and the Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for the bloodshed.

The convict who stabbed police officers in the city of Liege and used their handguns to kill them and a bystander was a “soldier of the caliphate,” IS said in a brief statement on the site of its Aamaq news agency.

Such wording is typical of the claims IS makes even when slaying suspects have not been linked directly to the terror group. Belgian authoritie­s have not said if they have evidence the inmate had vowed allegiance to IS or was acting on its orders.

Interior Minister Jan Jambon noted that Benjamin Herman, the Belgian national named as the Liege killer, killed a fourth person on Monday night away from the eastern industrial town.

Herman, 31, a convert to Islam, was known to local authoritie­s as a repeat offender involved in petty crime and drugs. He had been imprisoned since 2003 and was on a 48-hour leave when the two female police officers were attacked. Police shot him dead a not long after.

Officials said Wednesday that the death toll from the attack outside a Liege cafe might have been higher if the cafe’s owner and a cleaning lady had acted with less skill and courage.

Herman first stabbed the officers repeatedly from behind with a knife, stole their handguns and shot them as they lay on the ground. Crossing the road, he shot a 22-year old passenger in a car and shouted “Allahu akbar,” the Arabic phrase for God is great, several times, authoritie­s said.

The cafe owner quickly hustled patrons out of sight as the gunman went in and out of the establishm­ent. Herman then took a cleaning woman hostage at a nearby school. Imaankaf Darifa, the hostage, told The Associated Press she tried to keep him away from the children.

“I told him: ‘You are in a school here, you cannot come in a school, it is not right what you are doing,’” Darifa recalled.

 ?? Geert Vanden Wijngaert ?? The Associated Press Bernadette Hennart, right, mother of slain police officer Soraya Belkacemi, and her son, Kamel Belkacemi, visit a memorial Wednesday in Liege, Belgium.
Geert Vanden Wijngaert The Associated Press Bernadette Hennart, right, mother of slain police officer Soraya Belkacemi, and her son, Kamel Belkacemi, visit a memorial Wednesday in Liege, Belgium.

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