Belgium charges two new Brussels attacks suspects

Belgium charges two new Brussels attacks suspects

April 13, 2016
A Belgian soldier controls motorists arriving at Brussels' airport in Zaventem on Monday. — AFP
A Belgian soldier controls motorists arriving at Brussels' airport in Zaventem on Monday. — AFP

BRUSSELS — Belgium has charged two new suspects over last month’s deadly Brussels airport and metro attacks as police pursue their terror hunt “night and day,” the federal prosecutor said on Tuesday.

The two suspects, Smail F. and Ibrahim F., were “charged with participation in the activities of a terrorist group, terrorist murders and attempts to commit terrorist murders, as a perpetrator, co-perpetrator or accomplice,” a statement said.

The prosecutor said there were “indications” the two men could be linked to the rental of an address in Avenue des Casernes in Brussels’ Etterbeek district, which was raided last week and is not far from federal police headquarters.

At the time, police said they found nothing of interest but reports suggested that two other men — one of them Khalid El Bakraoui, who blew himself up at Maalbeek metro station — may have stayed there, or used the address.

The second man, Swedish national Osama Krayem, was seen on CCTV with Bakraoui at a nearby metro station on March 22, and was apparently carrying a rucksack bomb.

Bakraoui then boarded the metro, traveling to Maalbeek station near the European Union headquarters district where he blew himself up. Krayem was arrested last week and charged with terror offenses.

Belgian media identified Tuesday’s suspects as brothers Smail and Ibrahim Farisi who were said to have “cleaned” the Etterbeek apartment the day after the attacks. It was not clear when the two men were arrested.

There is considerable speculation in Belgium that despite recent police successes, there could be more suspects still on the run.

The federal prosecutor gave no further details, citing the need for secrecy in the investigation “which is continuing actively, day and night.”

The airport and metro bombings killed 32 people in Belgium’s worst terror attack which, like the November attacks on Paris, was claimed by the Daesh group.

Investigators have uncovered extensive links between the two attacks, with many of the same people involved and linked to IS in Syria. At the weekend, the prosecutor said the Brussels cell had originally planned another attack in France but the arrest of Paris suspect Salah Abdeslam on March 18, coupled with a series of massive police raids, made them switch to target Belgium instead.

“Surprised by the speed of the progress in the ongoing investigation, they urgently took the decision to strike in Brussels,” the prosecutor said.

Apparently reflecting these fears as the net closed in, one of the airport bombers, Ibrahim El Bakraoui, left behind what the authorities described as a “will” on a computer in which he said he felt “hunted” saying: “I don’t know what to do.”

The other airport bomber was Najim Laachraoui, whose DNA was found on a suicide vest recovered at the Bataclan concert hall in Paris where 90 people died. The Belgian authorities gave no details of the planned attack in France.

Late last month, French police arrested Reda Kriket on the outskirts of Paris, finding weapons and explosives in a flat he used, suggesting he was planning an act of “extreme violence.”

Belgium has also arrested several suspects in connection with the Kriket case.

On Friday, police netted another key Paris suspect: Mohamed Abrini, the so-called “man in the hat” who was seen in CCTV footage at Brussels airport with two other bombers shortly before the attack.

Abrini, 31, was seen calmly leaving the devastated departures hall and walking back to central Brussels before disappearing from sight.

He had also been caught on CCTV with Paris attacks suspect Salah Abdeslam at a motorway service station shortly before the November attacks.

Abdeslam, whose brother blew himself up during the assault on the French capital, had been due to do the same but backed out at the last moment, fleeing to Brussels where he hid until police caught him on March 18, not far from his family home in Molenbeek district.

Abrini grew up with Abdeslam in Molenbeek along with several other suspects, who all share a similar story of getting on the wrong side of the law and becoming radicalized.

Critics say the authorities have not done enough to prevent extremism in areas such as Molenbeek, with Belgium proportionately the biggest source of foreign fighters going to join Daesh in Syria.


April 13, 2016
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