2 held in Belgium over terror plot
BELGIAN authorities said yesterday they had arrested two men and seized military-type uniforms and Islamic State group propaganda in connection with a suspected plot to unleash holiday season attacks against police and locations in Brussels.
The attacks under preparation “were the same style as those perpetrated in Paris November 13,” in which 130 people were killed and hundreds injured by suicide bombers and gunmen equipped with assault rifles, according to an internal document from Belgian state security services cited by RTBF French-language television.
Those lethal actions were claimed by the Islamic State group.
The two suspects were arrested following searches on Sunday and Monday in the Brussels area, the eastern Liege region and Flemish Brabant, the Belgian Federal Prosecutor’s Office said in a statement. It did not disclose their names or further information about them.
During the searches, no weapons or explosives were found, but military-type training uniforms, IS propaganda material and computer equipment were impounded and are being examined.
It said the case was unrelated to the bloody actions in Paris a month and a half ago but that the investigation, which is still ongoing, has revealed a “threat of serious attacks that would target several emblematic places in Brussels and be committed during the end-of-year holidays.”
The prosecutor’s office gave no more details about the intended targets, but an official close to the investigation told reporters that they included the Belgian capital’s main square, thronged between Christmas and New Year with shoppers and strollers, as well as a police headquarters in an adjacent street.
“On the Grand Place, there are a lot of people, as well as soldiers and police who are patrolling, as well as a police station nearby,” said the official.
As of yesterday, police and soldiers in Brussels are being ordered to take special precautions to ensure their own safety, Benoit Ramacker, spokesman for the Belgian government’s Crisis Center, said.
Police and army patrols were greatly beefed up in Brussels following the Paris attacks, and Ramacker said a new official threat assessment conducted after this week’s searches and arrests concluded that the officers and soldiers deployed to protect residents and visitors might become targets themselves “in the exercise of their functions.”
In January, Belgian anti-terrorism units broke up what they said was an imminent attack on police by raiding a house in the eastern city of Verviers, killing two suspected jihadis and arresting a third.
Their main quarry, however, was not there — Abdelhamid Abaaoud, who went on to become the suspected ringleader of the attacks in Paris.
The prosecutor’s office said one of the suspects arrested has been charged with acting as the leader and recruiter of a terrorist group planning to commit terrorist offenses, the other with participating in a terrorist group’s activities as a principal actor or co-actor. The official close to the investigation said both of the suspects arrested were male.
Four other people were taken in, questioned and then released, the prosecutor’s office said.
Numerous suspects in the Paris attacks, including presumed leader Abaaoud, suicide bombers Bilal Hadfi and Brahim Abdeslam, and the latter’s fugitive brother Salah Abdeslam, were Brussels residents or had Brussels ties.
Nine people suspected of links to the Paris attackers have also been taken into custody in Belgium, with the most recent arrest on December 22.
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