Belgium charges three suspected terrorists after security raids

Three Belgian nationals arrested amid tight Euro 2016 security charged with attempt to commit terrorist murder after being suspected of planning an attack in Brussels during Belgium’s Euro 2016 match against Ireland

Three Belgian nationals arrested on Friday night have been charged with attempt to commit terrorist murder and with taking part in the activities of a terrorist group, Belgian’s federal prosecutor has said.

Named as Samir C, Moustapha B and Jawad B, the trio were among 12 people arrested during several security raids across Belgium.

Nine other suspects arrested have been released after questioning.

Flemish public broadcaster VTM said that those arrested were suspected of planning an attack in Brussels this weekend during one of Belgium’s matches in the Euro 2016 football tournament.

The arrests came shortly before many parties began across Belgium on Saturday to watch live broadcasts of the country’s Euro 2016 group stage match against Ireland.

Police had carried out about 40 house searches overnight.

The raids took place in 16 communes in Brussels, Flanders and Wallonia and “passed off without incident,” and no arms or explosives were found, a statement said.

Charles Michel, the prime minister, said the nation would remain “extremely vigilant, hour by hour”, but the terror level would remain at the second-highest, meaning a threat of an attack “is possible and likely”.

Belgians have been living under this level since the March 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,” Michel said 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 on Saturday that homes and garages were searched in 16 municipalities, mostly in and around Brussels. The statement said there were no major incidents during the raids and

“It is not over. We remain under terror alert 3, it means that something is still up,” said Jan Jambon, the interior minister. “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 probably planned in the near future.

The office did not link the raids to the attacks on 22 March, even though an eighth suspect was arrested as part of the investigation into those attacks late on Friday. A Belgian man, identified as Youssef EA, was charged with “participation in the activities of a terrorist group, terrorist murders and attempts to terrorist murders”.

Meanwhile, four senior ministers, including Michel, Jambon and the justice minister, Koen Geens, have received special protection after unspecified threats.

Geens said: “We learned about that late yesterday, that this close protection would happen. They say there are good reasons for that.”

Europe has been on high alert since the Euro 2016 football tournament began in neighbouring France this month, and following the attacks by Islamist suicide bombers in Brussels in March and Paris in November.

France has deployed 90,000 security forces for the tournament, but French President Francois Hollande has said that the threat of attacks will not stop the event from being successful.

On Wednesday, Belgian police received an anti-terrorism alert warning that a group of Islamic State fighters had recently left Syria en route for Europe where they were allegedly planning attacks in Belgium and France, security officials said.