Across Belgium parties were being planned Saturday to watch live
broadcasts of the country's soccer team playing Ireland at the European
Championships in neighboring France and some media said such events
could have been the targets.
Prime Minister Charles Michel said the nation would remain "extremely
vigilant, hour by hour," but that the terror level across the nation
would remain at the second-highest level, meaning a threat of an attack
"is possible and likely." Belgium has been living under such a threat
level since the Nov. 22 attacks on the Brussels subway and airport which
killed 32.
"It will be the case in the coming hours that we
will take additional and adapted measures," said Michel after a meeting
of the nation's security council. He refused to elaborate on the nature
of the threat.
The federal prosecutor's office said Saturday that
homes and car ports were searched in 16 municipalities, mostly in and
around Brussels. The statement said there were no major incidents during
the raids and that no arms or explosives were found.
It said 40 people were taken for interrogation, of
which 12 were arrested, and a judge will rule on their continued
detention later Saturday. "It is not over. We remain under terror alert
3, it means that something is still up," Interior Minister Jan Jambon
said. "Last night, we had a very successful action."
The prosecutor's statement said that "the results
of the investigation necessitated an immediate intervention," indicating
a violent attack was likely planned in the near future. The federal
prosecutor's office did not link the raids to the March 22 attacks, even
though an eighth suspect was arrested as part of the investigation of
those attacks late Friday.
The Belgian man, identified as Youssef E.A.,
was charged with "participation in the activities of a terrorist group,
terrorist murders and attempts to terrorist murders."
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