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Belgian police shoot suspect in deadly Brussels attack

Officials in Belgium have confirmed a man who shot dead two Swedish football fans in Brussels was killed by police during his arrest. The city had been on high alert following what officials called a "terrorist attack."


Belgian police shoot suspect in deadly Brussels attack
Belgian police shoot suspect in deadly Brussels attack

Police in Brussels on Tuesday morning shot a man suspected of carrying out the fatal shooting of two Swedish nationals in the city center on Monday night.


Interior Minister Annelies Verlinden later confirmed that the suspect was killed after police encountered him in a cafe in the Belgian capital's Schaerbeek neighborhood.


"The perpetrator of the terrorist attack in Brussels has been identified and has died," Verlinden wrote on social media.


What we know so far


Belgium had raised the security alert status of Brussels to the highest level in the wake of the attack, ramping up police presence. Officers tracked down the suspect after an intensive manhunt.


The automatic rifle found close to the person who was shot was the same weapon as the one used during the Monday evening attack, Interior Minister Verlinden told broadcaster VRT.


Two Swedish nationals were shot dead in the attack and a third one was wounded. The suspect fled the scene in central Brussels after the shooting, as a football match between Belgium and Sweden was about to start. The match was subsequently called off.


The suspect, who had identified himself as a member of the so-called "Islamic State" terror group, claimed responsibility in a video posted online.


Earlier, Belgian Prime Minister Alexander de Croo said the suspect was a man of Tunisian origin who was living in Belgium illegally.


The attacker was known to police in connection with people smuggling. He had unsuccessfully sought asylum in Belgium in November 2019.



Heightened security in Europe


The shooting comes as some European countries had already raised alertness levels over terrorism linked to the Israel-Hamas conflict.


A Belgian federal prosecutor said after the shootings that there was no evidence of a link to the recent renewed conflict between Israel and Palestinian militants.



Source: DW


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