French police are examining what appears to be a suicide bomb belt dumped on a Paris street (photo) following attacks that killed over a hundred people. It is said to resemble belts used by the attackers, and was found in a suburb which a suspect is thought to have passed through after the attacks.Rico says that Salah chickened out, apparently... (Too bad. The more of these guys that blow themselves up, the fewer we have to track down and kill.)
The US has issued a worldwide travel alert in response to the attacks. The Belgian capital, Brussels, remains on high alert. Schools and the Metro will stay closed on Tuesday. They are due to reopen on Wednesday, but the highest alert level will continue for at least another week.
Authorities fear attacks like those in Paris on 13 November may be carried out in Brussels, where at least one Paris attacker lived. Prime Minister Charles Michel warned that the threat remained "imminent".
French President Francois Hollande is due to meet President Barack Obama in Washington on Tuesday as he continues a busy week of international diplomacy, during which he will meet all other permanent members of the UN Security Council.
The suspected explosives belt was found in a dustbin by street cleaners in the Montrouge district. Police sources told news agencies it resembled those used in the 13 November attacks. According to the AFP news agency, the device lacked a detonator.
It is one of two key pieces of evidence discovered by French police and publicly linked to Salah Abdeslam, one of the main suspects. His brother Brahim blew himself up during the attacks. A mobile phone was previously found in an abandoned car he rented. Phone data suggest that on the night of the attacks, Salah Abdeslam was in the area where the belt was later found. It may be that he planned to detonate the bomb belt but abandoned the plan, either because the belt was malfunctioning or, as his brother Mohamed has suggested, because he had a last-minute change of heart.
Jawad Bendaoud, the man said to have provided accommodation in a Saint Denis apartment to three people killed in a police raid there last week, was brought before an anti-terrorism judge who will decide whether he will be charged or released.
France's Minister for the Family, Laurence Rossignol, has encouraged the families of children who lost a parent in the 13 November attacks to request the status of "ward of the nation", which dates back to World War One, and could entitle the child to grants and subsidies for their education and early adult life
France is to install security gates at the Paris and Lille train stations for the Thalys cross-Europe services by 20 December 2015. The train was the subject of a foiled gun attack in August of 2015.
The state funeral of 28-year-old Italian victim Valeria Solesin, who died in the arms of her boyfriend at the Bataclan, is being held is Venice, Italy.
A massive manhunt for Salah Abdeslam is continuing in both France and Belgium.
Brussels saw a third day of unprecedented restrictions, with troops and armed police patrolling the streets. Announcing that the state of alert would remain at Level Four, Michel stressed "we must all progressively get back to a normal life".
Many citizens are keen to do this, reports the BBC's Chris Morris in Brussels, but he says others will be wondering, with the main suspect still at large, what if anything has changed. The rest of Belgium remains on alert Level Three, meaning an attack is seen as possible and credible.
Belgian police have charged a fourth suspect with terrorism offenses related to the Paris attacks, the federal prosecutor said. The unnamed man was one of twenty people detained in raids on Sunday and Monday. Seventeen have been released without charge.
Mohammed Amri, 27, and Hamza Attou, 20, have already been charged with aiding Salah Abdeslam. A third, unnamed suspect has also been charged.
24 November 2015
Dump and run
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