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Man charged with plotting new attack in Belgium

Investigating judge charges suspect with attempting to commit 'terrorist murder', 'taking part in activities of terrorist organisation'
Belgian police have been on alert since 22 March suicide bombings at Brussels airport and metro station that killed 32 (AFP/file photo)

Belgian authorities on Saturday charged a man with plotting to launch a new attack in Belgium as Europe remained on edge after a wave of militant bloodshed in France and Germany.

An investigating judge charged Nourredine H., 33, with attempting to commit "terrorist murder" and "taking part in the activities of a terrorist organisation," the federal prosecutor's office said.

It said the charges come in the "case opened concerning a possible terrorist attack in Belgium." 

He was arrested along with his brother Hamza H. after raids on Friday in Belgium's French-speaking areas of Mons and Liege, but Hamza was released on Saturday without charge, the office said in a statement.

It had said earlier that both were "suspected of planning a terrorist attack somewhere in Belgium," but gave no other details.

The prosecutor's office said there was for now no link to the suicide bombings on 22 March at Brussels airport and a metro station near the European Union headquarters that left 32 people dead.

Those attacks were claimed by the Islamic State (IS) group, which holds swathes of territory in Syria and Iraq.

The arrests come amid IS calls for supporters to continue staging attacks in Belgium and other European countries supporting the US-led coalition that is bombing its Middle East “caliphate”.

No weapons or explosives were found in Friday's raids, seven in the Mons area and one in Liege, that were ordered by a judge specialising in counter-terror cases, it said.

Police carried out seven house searches in the region of Mons and a further house search in Liege on Friday evening, the France24 website reported. No weapons or explosives were found.

But Belgium's French-language broadcaster RTBF reported earlier it had information that one of the brothers had been searching for weapons and other "material."

He had served in the past as a logistics man for militants leaving for and returning from the Middle East, it added.

Militant springboard

Belgium is the main source per head of population of militant recruits going from the EU to fight with IS in Syria, causing deep concern that they will return home battle-hardened and even more radicalised.

The interior ministry said 457 Belgian men and women have gone or tried to join militants in the Middle East, including 90 who are missing or dead.

Belgium launched its first attacks against IS in Iraq in late 2014 as part of a US-led coalition. It joined a similar anti-IS operation in Syria this year.

Several of those involved in the Brussels bloodshed in March were directly linked to the 13 November bombing and gun attacks in Paris that left 130 dead and were also claimed by IS.

Belgian authorities last month charged two men with terrorist offences amid reports of a planned attack on a Euro 2016 fanzone in central Brussels.

Belgium beefed up security for its 21 July national day celebrations after the truck attack that killed 84 people in the French city of Nice on Bastille Day, 14 July.

Authorities in Belgium, which hosts the headquarters of the 28-nation EU and NATO as well, had previously anticipated a possible truck-style attack before the Nice carnage.

In less than two weeks in July, IS-inspired militants claimed four bloody assaults in France and Germany. 

Experts say each attack can inspire others, with militants egged on further by the media spotlight the atrocities attract.

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