The Islamic State claimed responsibility for brutal attacks that brought blood
and chaos to this capital city's airport and downtown metro station Tuesday,
killing dozens of people, wounding more than 150 and heightening terror alerts
around the world.
As of
Tuesday evening, the death toll was 34, the Associated Press said a Belgian
security official indicated.
Authorities
blamed suicide bombers for the attacks, but embarked on manhunt for at least one
suspected surviving attacker.
However, a
federal law enforcement official said Tuesday there was no immediate reason to
doubt the Islamic State’s claim of responsibility.
The official
who is not authorized to comment publicly said that based on the coordinated
nature of the attacks it was likely that the assaults had been long planned but
were accelerated following last week’s arrest of the Paris suspect
Salah
Abdeslam. The official discounted the notion that the attacks were a form of
retaliation. Rather, the official said, it appeared that they may have been
accelerated out of concern that the plots might be compromised if Abdeslam was
cooperating with Belgian investigators.
It was
earlier Tuesday that two deadly explosions tore through the departures hall at
Brussels Airport in nearby Zaventem, Belgium's federal prosecutor Frederic Van
Leeuw said. A short time later, a third blast brought mayhem and death to the
Maelbeek metro station, near European Union institutions in central Brussels, he
said.
"We
were fearing terrorist attacks and that has now happened," Belgian Prime
Minister Charles Michel said.
Federal
health officials said the airport attack killed at least 11 people and injured
81. Brussels Mayor Yvan Majeur put the subway death toll at 20, with more than
100 wounded there.
The Islamic
State claimed responsibility for the attacks in a statement to the Amaq news
agency.
"Islamic
State fighters opened fire inside Zaventem airport before several of them
detonated their explosive belts," the statement said. A "martyrdom
bomber detonated his explosive belt in the Maelbeek metro station," it
added.
The attack
came four days after the arrest of Salah Abdeslam, a suspect in November's
Paris attacks who was apprehended in Brussels after a four-month manhunt. After
the arrest, authorities said Abdeslam had planned to commit another attack, and
had a large network of associates. Still, authorities said it was too soon in
the investigation to tie Tuesday's horror to the Paris terror strike.
Belgium
raised the terror threat to its maximum level as security teams swept
neighborhoods for collaborators. The prosecutor's office released a photo taken
from an airport security camera showing possible suspects before the blasts.
Police found
an explosive device containing nails, "chemical products" and an
Islamic State flag during a house search in the Brussels neighborhood of
Shaerbeek, the Associated Press reported.
Authorities
shut down public transportation, closed the airport and warned residents to
stay home. Non-essential staff were evacuated from Belgium's power plants in
Doel and Tihange as a precaution, the plants' French operator, Engie, told
Reuters news service.
By late
Tuesday, some trains stations reopened to long lines as people began emerging
from their homes. Authorities said the airport would remain closed through
Wednesday.
President
Obama, speaking in Havana on the third day of a Latin American tour, said the
U.S. stands with Belgium and that the attack is "yet another reminder that
the world must unite, we must be together regardless of nationality or race or
faith, in fighting against the scourge of terrorism." Later, he ordered
all American flags in the U.S. to be flown at half-staff through Saturday.
Authorities
in Los Angeles, New York, Washington, Boston and elsewhere across the nation
tightened security at transit hubs and tourist sites. There were no indications
of specific threats against U.S. targets, authorities said.
In Belgium,
RTBF, citing the federal prosecutor's office, said Arabic screams were heard in
the departures hall before shots rang out, followed by the explosions. Weapons
were found at the scene, the broadcaster reported.
Three Mormon
missionaries from Utah were seriously injured in the airport blasts, the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints said. The Belgian Crisis Center said a
suspicious package was "neutralized" by security officials shortly
after the attack.
The U.S. Air
Force said one of its servicemembers from Joint Force Command Brunssum, the
Netherlands, was injured in the airport attack. The airman's family was also
present and sustained various injuries, the military branch said in a
statement.
Airport
worker Anthony Deloos told AP the first explosion took place near counters
where customers pay for overweight baggage. He and a colleague said the second
blast hit near a Starbucks.
"We
heard a big explosion. It’s like when you’re in a party and suddenly your
hearing goes out, from like a big noise,” Deloos said, adding that he jumped
into a luggage chute to protect himself.
The airport
evacuation left hundreds of people stuck in the parking lot and on the runway
of the airport.
Simon
O’Connor, who works for the European Commission in Brussels, told the Financial
Times he was in the lot when he heard the first explosion and thought it had
something to do with construction work. He heard the second explosion minutes
later.
“I walked to
the edge of the car park and you could see a lot of people looking distraught,”
he said. “The whole side of the terminal building was blown out. A lot of
people had blood on their faces, leg injuries. People began pouring out of the
building.”
Immediately
following the blast at the metro station, transportation authorities shut down
the entire subway system. Thirty minutes later, officials suspended all public
transportation, including trams and buses.
Ángela
González, 45, lives near an underground station in Brussels.
"Schools
are closed, no one is allowed to leave. In fact, no one is allowed out of
wherever they are," she said. "All you can hear is sirens and streets
are completely deserted."
González
said the attacks don't make her want to return to her native Spain. "This
is not just a Belgium problem, it is a European problem. We would not be safer
elsewhere."
The EU,
headquartered in Brussels, told its staff to stay at home or remain inside
buildings. The location of the metro stop is in a main thoroughfare of Brussels
that connects the Schuman roundabout, where the European Commission and the
Council of the EU are located, to the center of the city.
Michel also
urged people to stay at home. He called the attacks a "black day for
Belgium" and urged calm. "We have to face this united," he said.
The attack
drew a call for unity from numerous nations. Russian President Vladimir Putin
said the attack showed the need for a global approach to combating terror.
Italian premier Matteo Renzi pressed for a common European strategy for
security and defense.
“Europe has
to go all the way this time," he said.
In Paris,
where terror attacks on Nov. 13 killed 130, French President Francois Hollande
said the war against terror must be fought "in cold blood."
"Through
the attacks in Brussels, the whole of Europe has been hit," Hollande said.
"We are
at war," said French Prime Minister Manuel Valls. "We have been
enduring acts of war for many months in Europe. And in the face of this war, we
need an every minute mobilization."
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