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Belgium arrests two over suspected New Year attack plot
By AFP - Dec 29,2015 - Last updated at Dec 29,2015
An armed policeman patrols at the Grand Place in Brussels on Tuesday (AP photo)
BRUSSELS — Belgian police have arrested two people suspected of plotting attacks in Brussels during New Year festivities, just weeks after the militant bombings and shootings in Paris which were allegedly planned in Belgium.
The federal prosecutor's office in Brussels, the home of the European Union and NATO, said Tuesday that police seized military-style training uniforms, computer hardware and Daesh propaganda material in raids around the capital Brussels and in the Liege region.
But investigators said the police action on Sunday and Monday was not linked to the wave of deadly attacks in Paris in November which were claimed by the Daesh terror group and which France says were prepared in Belgium.
One of the two was arrested on suspicion of planning attacks as well as "playing a lead role in the activities of a terrorist group and recruiting for terrorist acts," the prosecutor's office said in a statement.
The second faced charges of planning and "participating in the activities of a terrorist group," it said.
'Emblematic sites'
"The investigation cast a light on serious threats of attacks believed to be aimed at several emblematic sites in Brussels and carried out during the end-of-year celebrations."
In response, Belgium's OCAM national crisis centre late Monday raised its alert level for police and soldiers in Brussels, "which could be symbolic targets," a spokesman told AFP.
The Belga news agency, citing an internal police memo, said there "exists a possible and credible threat of Paris-style attacks" against the high-profile Grand Place, the neighbouring central police station as well as soldiers and police in uniform.
Tourists and others flock to the Grand Place, the opulent central square of Brussels.
Media reported that the city authorities will decide Wednesday whether to go ahead with a New Year's Eve fireworks display at Place de Brouckere, another central square.
In the last year, the Belgian authorities have deployed troops, in addition to police reinforcements outside many locations in Brussels, including European Union buildings and foreign diplomatic missions, amid growing fears of militant attacks.
The raids, which were ordered by an investigating magistrate in Brussels who specialises in terrorism cases, turned up neither weapons nor explosives.
A total of six people were detained, including the two suspected of plotting attacks, but the four others were later released, the prosecutor's office said.
Probe ongoing
It said investigators were examining seized computer hardware, uniforms and Daesh propaganda material but declined to release any details about the suspects.
Prime Minister Charles Michel was in permanent contact with security officials about the case but had no immediate plans to make a statement, his office told AFP.
The Belgian authorities are still looking for suspects linked to the November 13 attacks on a Paris concert hall, restaurants, bars and the national stadium which left 130 people dead and hundreds more injured.
The top fugitive is Brussels-born Salah Abdeslam, 26, who is suspected of having played a key role in the Paris carnage and understood to have returned to the Belgian capital the day after the bloodshed.
Nine men have been detained including four accused of helping Abdeslam get away in the hours after the attacks.
Since the end of November, Brussels has remained at alert level three, one notch below the maximum alert of a serious and imminent terrorist threat.
For four days before then, officials fearing a repeat of the Paris attacks closed schools and underground train service as they put Brussels on maximum alert.
Belgium's Interior Minister Jan Jambon told Tuesday's edition of Le Soir newspaper that Abdeslam has been able to evade capture for so long because he has surprising "support in the communities".
In the European Union, Belgium is per capita the source of the highest number of fighters in Syria and Iraq with an estimated 500 of its citizens having gone to wage jihad there.
One of them is the alleged Paris attacks mastermind Abdelhamid Abaaoud, who was killed in a police raid a few days after the massacre.
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