16 January 2015

Belgian plot


The BBC has an article about anti-terrorist activity in Belgium:
Five people have been charged in Belgium following a series of anti-terror raids that left two suspects dead. The five have been charged with "participating in the activities of a terrorist group", the prosecutor's office told the AFP news agency. Officials had said there was an "imminent" threat from suspected jihadists to kill police officers.
Earlier, Belgium's government announced tough new measures to tackle terrorism. Eric Van Der Sypt, an official at the prosecutors' office, told AFP that three of the five charged suspects were still in custody while the other two had been conditionally released. The rest of the thirteen who had been detained in the raids would not be prosecuted, he added.
Details of the raids came as police in France said they had arrested twelve people over attacks in Paris last week, and German officials said they had detained two men in raids against a group suspected of planning an attack in Syria.
The head of Europol, Rob Wainwright, told the BBC that the operations highlighted the complex nature of the terrorist threat across Europe. "We're dealing with multiple thousands of potential terrorists," he told the BBC World Service. He said it was hard for police to identify plans because suspects were "working in a self-radicalized way very often, not necessarily under any command and control structure".
In Belgium, prosecutor Thierry Werts told reporters that guns, munitions, and explosives, as well as police uniforms and a large amount of money, were seized during the overnight raids.
Van Der Sypt added: "The investigation... has shown that these people had the intention to kill several policemen in the street and at police stations. The operation was meant to dismantle a terrorist cell... but also the logistics network behind it," he said. Protective measures would be put in place at police buildings, he said.
Analysis by Duncan Crawford, BBC News, Brussels:
Officials in Belgium are well aware of the threat posed by jihadists. In May of 2014, four people were gunned down at the Jewish Museum in Brussels. Mehdi Nemmouche, a 29-year-old Frenchman who had returned from Syria, is due to stand trial for the attack.
The country's largest ever terror case will conclude in Antwerp next month, where more than forty members of a now-disbanded group, Sharia4Belgium, are accused of recruiting and radicalizing dozens of young men to fight in Syria.
Officials say up to 350 Belgian citizens have travelled to Syria and Iraq. The Belgian security services fear radicalized fighters could return home to launch a terror attack. The government says it will toughen up anti-terror laws, but officials acknowledge it's impossible to prevent all attacks.
No link had been established with last week's attacks in Paris, Van Der Sypt said, adding that Belgium would seek the extradition of the two suspects in France. "I can confirm that we started this investigation before the attacks in Paris," he said.
Last week, gunmen in Paris attacked the offices of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, a kosher supermarket and police officers, killing seventeen people in the French capital.
Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel thanked the French authorities for detaining the suspects in France. He told the public there was no need to panic, and that his government would "take measures" to ensure the safety of civilians.
The government said it would strengthen its anti-terror legislation and policies. New measures would include:
Making traveling abroad for terrorist activists punishable by law
Expanding the cases where Belgian citizenship can be revoked for those dual nationals thought to pose a terror risk
Calling in the Army to boost security when necessary
Freezing the assets of those financing terrorism
Measures to tackle radicalization in prisons
Gilles de Kerchove, a counter-terrorism co-ordinator for the EU, told the BBC he was "not surprised" there were plans for attacks in Belgium, because the country had "suffered in a way from the high number of people going to Syria and Iraq" to fight.
Belgian officials say over three hundred people have left Belgium to fight with Islamic militant groups in Syria and Iraq. Among European countries, Belgium is thought to have the highest number of citizens per capita who have gone fight in Syria. The suspects shot dead had returned from the country, police said. They had shot at police "for several minutes" before being killed, prosecutors added.
The terror threat level in Belgium has been raised to three, the second highest.
Some Jewish schools in Antwerp and Brussels were closed after they were informed that they could be potential targets, Belgian newspaper Joods Actueel reported.
Rico says the Belgians have no more sense of humor about this merde (or stront, if you speak Dutch) than the French...

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