Two terrorists killed in Belgium police raid
A third man arrested. Prosecutor: "They were about to launch large-scale attacks"
Jan 15, 2015, 08:12PM | Omri Ariel
At least two people suspected of belonging to a terror group were killed during a police counter-terror raid in Belgium Thursday. According to another report, a man suspected of selling weapons used in last week's terror attack in Paris was detained in a different part of the country.
The raid took place in the eastern Belgian town of Verviers. Witnesses reported hearing heavy gunfire for several minutes, as well as explosions near the local railway station.
Prosecutor Eric Van der Sypt told reporters the police had targeted a group returning from Syria who had intended to launch "large-scale" terror attacks. He added that no police or civilians were harmed during the raid. In May 2014, Israeli citizens Emanuel and Miriam Riva were killed in a terror attack inside the Jewish Museum in Brussels.
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According to reports on Thursday evening three terrorists were killed during a police counter-terrorism raid in Verviers in the east of Belgium . Police activity was still continuing. The event followed a new developments in the investigation into Amedy Coulibaly, the terrorist behind the kosher supermarket attack and the killing of a French policewoman, after a Belgium man turned himself in to authorities, saying he had been in touch with Coulibaly.
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Belgian Police killed two men who opened fire on them during one of about a dozen raids on Thursday against a group that was about to launch "terrorist attacks on a grand scale," a federal prosecutor told a news conference. A third man was arrested during the operation in the eastern town of Verviers, Eric Van Der Sypt added, saying there was, for the time being, no direct connection to last week's attacks in Paris. No police were injured in the operation, he said.
"The suspects immediately and for several minutes opened fire with military weaponry and handguns on the special units of the federal police before they were neutralized," he said. Judiciary officials confirmed only that a counter-terrorism operation had taken place near the center of the town, in the east of the country between the city of Liege and the German border. RTBF said it was an operation intended to check on suspected radicals -- one of several being conducted against people believed to have returned to Belgium after taking part in the Syrian civil war.
Belgium has seen significant radical Islamist activity among its Muslim population. Local media said gunshots and several explosions were heard on a residential street in Verviers near the railway station and one photo posted by a witness on Twitter showed police vehicles and ambulances blocking the street.
The raid came after prosecutors said earlier on Thursday that Belgian authorities have detained a man for arms dealing and were investigating whether he supplied one of the Islamist gunmen who together killed 17 people in Paris last week. Belgian media reported that a man had handed himself in to police in the southern city of Charleroi on Tuesday, saying he had been in touch with Amedy Coulibaly, the terrorist who took hostages in a Jewish supermarket in the French capital and was later killed by security forces.
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No evidence has been publicly
released suggesting ISIS leadership signed off on the plots. But the worry now
is that ISIS has pivoted toward launching attacks in Europe. European officials say all this adds up to an
unprecedented terrorist threat in Europe. Late last year, just weeks before the
attacks on a satirical magazine, Jewish grocery and police officers in Paris,
French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said France had never faced a greater
terrorist threat. ISIS runs large
training facilities in Syria, has deep financial pockets, and access to
thousands of potential European recruits.
CNN's Deborah Feyerick, Jim Sciutto and Jason Hanna contributed to this report.
According to reports on Thursday evening three terrorists were killed during a police counter-terrorism raid in Verviers in the east of Belgium . Police activity was still continuing. The event followed a new developments in the investigation into Amedy Coulibaly, the terrorist behind the kosher supermarket attack and the killing of a French policewoman, after a Belgium man turned himself in to authorities, saying he had been in touch with Coulibaly.
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Belgian Police killed two men who opened fire on them during one of about a dozen raids on Thursday against a group that was about to launch "terrorist attacks on a grand scale," a federal prosecutor told a news conference. A third man was arrested during the operation in the eastern town of Verviers, Eric Van Der Sypt added, saying there was, for the time being, no direct connection to last week's attacks in Paris. No police were injured in the operation, he said.
"The suspects immediately and for several minutes opened fire with military weaponry and handguns on the special units of the federal police before they were neutralized," he said. Judiciary officials confirmed only that a counter-terrorism operation had taken place near the center of the town, in the east of the country between the city of Liege and the German border. RTBF said it was an operation intended to check on suspected radicals -- one of several being conducted against people believed to have returned to Belgium after taking part in the Syrian civil war.
Belgium has seen significant radical Islamist activity among its Muslim population. Local media said gunshots and several explosions were heard on a residential street in Verviers near the railway station and one photo posted by a witness on Twitter showed police vehicles and ambulances blocking the street.
The raid came after prosecutors said earlier on Thursday that Belgian authorities have detained a man for arms dealing and were investigating whether he supplied one of the Islamist gunmen who together killed 17 people in Paris last week. Belgian media reported that a man had handed himself in to police in the southern city of Charleroi on Tuesday, saying he had been in touch with Amedy Coulibaly, the terrorist who took hostages in a Jewish supermarket in the French capital and was later killed by security forces.
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(CNN)A terror cell on the brink
of carrying out an attack was the target of a raid Thursday that left two
suspects dead, Belgian authorities said.
A third suspect was injured and taken into custody in the operation at a
building in the eastern city of Verviers, prosecutor's spokesman Thierry Werts
told reporters. A senior Belgian
counterterrorism official told CNN that the alleged terror cell is believed to
have received instructions from ISIS.
Some members of the cell had
traveled to Syria and met with ISIS, which plotted the attacks as retaliation
for U.S.-led airstrikes in Syria and Iraq, the Belgian source said. "This was in the framework of an
operation looking into an operational cell made up of people, some of whom
coming back from Syria," Werts said. "The investigation made it
possible to determine that the group was about to carry out major terrorist attacks
in Belgium imminently." The
operation, which authorities said was ongoing, added fresh fuel to a fear
that's been simmering for months as thousands of Europeans went off to join
ISIS fighters in Syria.
Would they bring the war back
with them when they returned home?
Police officers gather at the
scene of an anti-terrorism operation in Verviers, Belgium, on Thursday, January
15. Two people were killed during a raid on a suspected terror cell, Belgian
authorities said. A third suspect was injured and taken into custody. Gunfire
rang out as authorities closed in…Frédéric Hausman was inside his
house in Verviers when he heard the explosions start. From the window, he saw police officers
firing assault rifles at a house nearby. He watched smoke rising after another
explosion went off. Then, police entered the house, Hausman told CNN's
"Erin Burnett Out Front." And even though he couldn't see exactly what
happened next, he heard it. "I can
hear it. Everybody can hear it," Hausman said. "In this little city,
everybody heard the sound." Shouts,
gunfire and the sound of glass shattering echo in a video Hausman posted on
YouTube. "The suspects immediately,
and for long minutes, fired using weapons and hand weapons before being
neutralized," Werts said.
Verviers is about 69 miles (111
kilometers) east-southeast of Brussels and 200 miles (322 kilometers) northeast
of Paris, where terrorist attacks last week heightened alerts in Europe. CNN affiliate VTM reported that the terrorism
investigation in Belgium started weeks ago, and there has been no connection
established with the Paris attacks. A
Western intelligence source said the Paris attacks played a role in
accelerating the timing of the Belgian operation. One reason: The arrest of a Belgian arms
dealer suspected of providing weapons to Amedy Coulibaly, the man who attacked
a Paris kosher supermarket and also pledged allegiance to ISIS. Belgian
investigators questioned him and searched his possessions, the source
said. Through the arms dealer, the
investigators got a number of "positive hits" on suspected extremists
already known to authorities. But in the wake of the Paris attacks, the source
said, it stepped up the urgency. The trio targeted in the Verviers
raid had been under surveillance for some time, Werts said. Additional
anti-terrorism operations are underway in other cities, the Belgian
counterterrorism official said.
Shift in strategy for ISIS?
In recent weeks, European
security services received indications of an ominous possibility: that ISIS may
have started directing European extremists in Syria and Iraq to launch
terrorist attacks back in their home countries, the Belgian counterterrorism official
said. Security agencies in several
European countries were intensely investigating several groups of returnees
from Syria and Iraq, the official said, including the group that authorities
confronted in Belgium. The Belgian
counterterrorism official said indications of ISIS ordering attacks in Europe
mark an apparent significant shift by the terrorist group. Before the air
campaign against it, the official said, there was little indication ISIS
leaders were directly plotting attacks in the West. Instead, the group
prioritized its project to create an Islamic caliphate.
The official named France, the UK
and Belgium as countries facing a particular threat. Counterterrorism agencies
in Germany also are on high alert because of the number of fighters who have
traveled. Several European countries, including Britain, France, Belgium and
the Netherlands are participating in the air campaign against ISIS in
Iraq. Why would ISIS change tack? Partly
because of increased competition between ISIS and al Qaeda affiliates,
including the Khorasan group in Syria, to be seen as the standard bearers of
global jihad, according to the official.
The official said there is also
significant concern about Khorasan attack plotting against Europe. U.S.
officials previously told CNN that French al Qaeda operative and bomb-maker
David Drugeon was suspected to be talent-spotting European jihadis in Syria for
operations in Europe. Drugeon was injured in a drone strike in November but is
believed to be still alive. Last week,
Andrew Parker, the head of Britain's security service MI5, warned, "A
group of core al Qaeda terrorists in Syria is planning mass casualty attacks
against the West," an apparent reference to the Khorasan group.
Returning fighters implicated in
other attack European officials have
been warning for months about the unprecedented challenge posed by returning
fighters. More than 3,000 Europeans have left to fight in Syria in recent
years. The total number who have returned to Europe is estimated to be over 500,
including 250 who have returned to the UK, almost 200 to France and about 70 to
Belgium. Several returning ISIS fighters
have already been implicated in attack plans in Europe. In February, police in
Cannes broke up an alleged plot to bomb targets in France by Ibrahim Boudina, a
French-Algerian extremist who allegedly had just returned from fighting with
ISIS in Syria. Police said they found
almost a kilogram of the high explosive TATP inside soda cans in his family's
Cannes apartment building. Screws and nails were attached to one with sticky
tape as shrapnel, according to sources briefed on the investigation. Boudina
has denied the allegations against him.
Mehdi Nemmouche, a
French-Algerian ISIS fighter who allegedly helped guard Western hostages in Syria
before returning to Europe, allegedly shot and killed four people at a Jewish
museum in Brussels in May. Nemmouche was arrested in France and extradited to
face trial in Belgium. He has denied the charges. In both the Cannes and
Brussels plots, investigators believe it is possible the men were acting on
their own steam.
CNN's Deborah Feyerick, Jim Sciutto and Jason Hanna contributed to this report.
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