Brussels police repond to a terror attack on a Metro in the heart of Belgian
Carl Court/Getty Images
Police in Belgium are
searching for two individuals with direct links to the Brussels
bombings after authorities identified a second suspect involved in the
attack on Maalbeek metro station where 16 people were killed.
The deadly attack on the Brussels metro was carried out by Khalid
el-Bakraoui, who self-detonated as the carriage pulled out of Maalbeek
station in the centre of the Belgian capital. His brother Ibrahim and
Islamic State (Isis) bomb maker Najim Laachraoui killed at least 15 at Zaventem airport and were pictured with another individual in the departure hall, who is now being sought by authorities.Police are now extending the their manhunt to include a second individual who is believed to have assisted Khalid el-Bakraoui at the Metro station. The Belgian broadcaster RTBF reported that surveillance footage from Maalbeek has shown one man accompanying el-Bakraoui carrying a large bag. It is unclear whether he was killed in the attack or is now on the run.
Combination
photo showing three men who police have issued a wanted notice on
suspicion of involvement in the Brussels airport attack
Reuters
Belgian
authorities have said a total of at least 31 were killed in Tuesday's
(22 March) attacks. Clear links have emerged between the Islamic State
attackers and the suicide bombers who killed 130 in Paris on 13 November
2015. Laachraoui in particular is believed to have made the suicide vests used in the assaults on the French capital.
A will and a recorded diary recovered from the computer of Ibrahim el-Bakraoui refers to a "brother in prison" who is believed to be Salah Abdeslam.
The Paris attacker was arrested in Brussels on 18 March. The will also
mentioned an individual called Mohammed Bakkali, who was also arrested
in Belgium in December for his involvement in the Paris attacks.
In raids across the Belgian capital in the 24 hours
following the attacks, one individual was detained and is being held for
questioning. Another was arrested but later released after what Belgian
prosecutor Frederic Van Leeuw referred to as a thorough hearing.
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