Two brothers behind Belgium bombings: Brussels attacks
Two of the
suicide bombers who carried out attacks in Brussels on Tuesday have been named
as brothers Khalid and Brahim el-Bakraoui, Belgian nationals.
The federal
prosecutor said Brahim was part of the attack at Zaventem airport that killed
11 people. Khalid struck at Maelbeek metro, where 20 people died.
Two other
attackers at the airport have not yet been identified. One of them died,
another is on the run.
Prosecutors
say Brahim left a note in which he wrote of his desperation.
Belgium is
observing three days of national mourning. The nation held a minute's silence
at midday (11:00 GMT) on Wednesday. Belgium's king and queen have visited the
airport and met some of the 260 injured in hospital.
So-called
Islamic State (IS) has said it was behind the attacks.
Federal
Prosecutor Frederic Van Leeuw said Brahim el-Bakraoui had been identified as
the middle of three men in a CCTV image of the suspects of the airport attack.
The man on
the left is believed to have died at the airport. The man on the right, wearing
the hat, is thought to have fled the scene.
Unconfirmed
reports in Belgian and French media suggest the man on the left is the wanted
jihadist Najim Laachraoui.
Mr Van Leeuw
told reporters that a taxi driver said he had picked up the three men from an
address in the Schaerbeek area of Brussels. This apartment was raided later on
Tuesday and bomb-making materials, including 15kg (33lb) of high explosive,
were found.
A note from
Brahim el-Bakraoui was found in a nearby rubbish bin. In it, he wrote:
"I'm in a hurry. I don't know what to do anymore, they're looking for me
everywhere. I'm not safe anymore. If I give myself up they'll put me in a
cell."
Mr van Leeuw
said the two brothers were known to police and had criminal records. They were
identified by DNA records.
The RTBF
broadcaster, quoting a police source, said that Khalid el-Bakraoui, 27, had
used a false name to rent the flat in the Forest area of the Belgian capital
where police killed a gunman in a shootout last week.
It was
during that raid that police found a fingerprint of Salah Abdeslam, the main
suspect in the Paris terror attacks of 13 November. He was arrested in a raid
in Brussels last Friday and is due to appear before a pre-trial court on
Wednesday.
Khalid
el-Bakraoui appears on the Interpol website. It says that he is being sought
for terrorist activities.
Turkey says
Brahim was detained by Turkish officials on the border with Syria in June 2015.
They deported him to Belgium with the warning that he was a "foreign
fighter" but the Belgian authorities let him go. Belgium has not yet
responded to the claims.
The man on
the right in the CCTV picture, who is being hunted, had a bag of detonators
that were left behind. Mr Van Leeuw said the bag had contained "the
biggest bomb", which later exploded "because it was so unstable"
but did not harm anyone.
He had
earlier been identified in Belgian media as Najim Laachraoui, who was named
earlier this week by police as a wanted accomplice of Abdeslam.
Analysts say
Laachraoui is believed to be a key bomb maker, and French media say he also
played a major role in the terror attacks in Paris.
Some Belgian
media reported on Wednesday that he was the man arrested in Anderlecht area of
the city, but Mr Van Leeuw denied the reports.
The first of
the victims to be named is Peruvian Adelma Tapia Ruiz, 37.
She had been
at Zaventem airport with her Belgian husband and twin four-year-old daughters,
who were unharmed, her brother told Peruvian radio.
World
leaders have been reacting to the attacks. US President Barack Obama said
fighting IS was his administration's "top priority", but added:
"How do we do it in an intelligent way?"
France's
Prime Minister Manuel Valls, on a visit to Belgium, warned that EU nations
"will have to invest massively in their security system" in the
coming years.
EU interior
and justice ministers will hold a crisis meeting in Brussels on Thursday to
discuss their response to the latest attacks.
Belgium has
raised its terrorism alert to the highest level, and its international airport
will remain closed on Thursday. Brussels Metro is due to close on Wednesday at
19:00 (18:00 GMT), operators say.
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