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Investigators 'far from solving puzzle' of Paris attacks: Belgian prosecutor

Prosecutors said they expected Salah Abdeslam to 'explain himself'
French prosecutor Francois Molins, spokesperson Thierry West and Belgian prosecutor Frederic Van Leeuw leave after addressing a press conference in Brussels (AFP)
By AFP

Investigators are still "far from solving the puzzle" of the Paris attacks, Belgium's federal prosecutor said on Monday after talks with his French counterpart in the wake of the arrest of key suspect Salah Abdeslam.

"We have a not bad amount of pieces of the puzzle and in the last few days several pieces have found their place. But I am still, and we are still, far from solving the puzzle," Frederic Van Leeuw told a news conference.

"We hope to go as far as possible," he said.

Van Leeuw added that Abdeslam "was heard" by investigators following his capture in a police raid in Brussels on Friday "but then again he was not in good form as you can imagine because he was wounded."

Abdeslam, 26, was shot in the leg during Friday's dramatic raid.

Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said that France expected Abdeslam's extradition over the 13 November gun and suicide bomb attacks in which 130 people were killed.

"There is a strong expectation from the French justice authorities and particularly from the families of the victims that Salah Abdeslam comes to explain himself," Molins said.

"It's up to Salah Abdeslam to decide - either he agrees and can be transferred rapidly, or he doesn't consent and it will be up to the Belgian authorities to decide whether there is any reason that could allow the refusal of his transfer."

He confirmed comments that he made on Saturday saying that a vehicle linked to Abdeslam was traced to the Netherlands "but that does not mean Salah Abdeslam was in the Netherlands".

Investigators have traced Abdeslam's travels in the months before the attacks to Germany, Austria and Hungary.

He fled to Brussels after the attacks, passing through three French police checks, but apart from three weeks when he was believed to be in a flat in the north of the capital, his whereabouts during the past four months are unknown.

"We don't have the full timeline for what Salah Abdeslam did between November 14 and his arrest," Van Leeuw said.

Molins said he was not worried by a threat by Abdeslam's lawyer to lodge a legal complaint against him for divulging the details of the first interrogation with the suspect to journalists on Saturday.

"I have no concerns on that point," he said, adding that he was working on a "joint file" with Belgian authorities and "with joint dossiers we are allowed to express ourselves."

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