Several suspects are still on the run
The effects of the Brussels bomb blast isn't settling soon as more information keep coming out each moment.
With Belgians reeling in shock from Tuesday’s deadly suicide bombings
in the capital Brussels, officials said several suspects were still the
run, and that they were far from cracking the jihadist network behind
the attacks.
“There are still a number of people possibly involved,
remaining, who have not been arrested and who still pose a danger,” Paul
van Tigchelt, director of the government’s Center for Analysis of
Threats, told reporters on Wednesday. “Police and intelligence services
are working with all their might on the basis of information from
yesterday and today.”
As residents returned to work, Belgian media, citing several unnamed
officials, said police had captured Najim Laachraoui, 24, who police
believe made the suicide vests used in the Paris attacks in November
last year. Local media speculated that Laachraoui was one of three men
pictured on CCTV at Brussels Airport on Tuesday shortly before two
explosions killed 11 people.
Officials dismissed reports of Laachraoui’s arrest but federal
prosecutor Frederic Van Leeuw told reporters that Ibrahim El Bakraoui,
29, and another as yet unidentified suicide bomber had attacked the
airport. A third attacker also came to the airport with an explosive in a
bag, but it exploded later and no one was hurt, he said.
Ibrahim’s brother, Khalid El Bakraoui, 27, blew himself up at the
Maelbeek subway station. Both attacks killed at least 31 people and
wounded 270.
For police, a lucky break in the case came from a taxi driver, who
recognized the three men on the security camera the moment the image was
broadcast on television, as the passengers he had driven to the
airport. He told police he had picked them up from an apartment on Rue
Max Roos in the Schaerbeek district in northeast Brussels—an area where
police found bomb-making equipment allegedly used in the Paris attacks
last November 13, which killed 130 people.
Police also found an abandoned computer in a trash can near the
apartment, with a frantic last message from Ibrahim El Bakraoui,
according to to Van Leeuw. “Being in a hurry, I don’t know what to do,
being searched for everywhere, not being safe,” the note said. “If it
drags on it could end up with me in a prison cell next him.” Although
“him” is not named, the Brussels attacks came just four days after
Belgian police finally captured Salah Abdeslam, the only alleged
perpetrator from the Paris attacks believed to be still alive.
The Belgian-born El Bakraoui brothers were well known to Belgian
police, since they had been arrested previously for crimes including
carjacking. But until Tuesday, nothing suggested that they were
jihadists. “The two terrorists had a criminal record but no connection
to terrorism,” Van Leeuw said.
He told reporters the men had ordered a big taxi, telling the depot
they had a lot of luggage. Mistakenly, the taxi company sent a small
taxi, forcing them to leave behind two of the five bags they had—two
other bombs, according to Van Leeuw. Police searches later found 15 kgs
(about 32 lbs) of explosives, as well as nails and screws found in the
explosive devices in Tuesday’s attacks. They also found 150 litres of
acetone, 30 litres of oxygenated water and detonators.
The first victim of the bombings was publicly named as Adelma Tapia
Ruiz, 36, a Peruvian resident of Brussels. She was at the airport to see
off relatives of her Belgian husband, Christopher Delcambe, who was
injured. The couple’s twin four-year-old daughters had just left the
hall to play and were followed by their father when the explosion
occurred.
Belgians Olivier Delespesse and Leopold Hecht were named on social media as being killed in the attacks.
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