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People are evacuated from the Brussels airport after the terrorist attack (Image: Reuters) |
Associated Press
- BRUSSELS: The Islamic State group on Tuesday officially claimed
responsibility for the attacks in Brussels that left some 35 people dead and
threatened further violence.
Belgium launched
a huge manhunt Tuesday after a series of bombings claimed by the Islamic State
group ripped through Brussels airport and a metro train, killing around 35
people in the latest attack to bring carnage to the heart of Europe.
Two huge blasts,
both possibly caused by a suicide bomber, hit the check-in hall at Zaventem
Airport, strewing the scene with blood and mangled bodies and sending hundreds
of terrified travelers fleeing in terror.
Belgian
authorities released pictures of two of the suspected suicide attackers pushing
trolleys through the terminal and said they were "actively searching"
for a third whose bomb failed to go off.
Debris in the Brussels airport after two blasts (Image: BBC) |
The fact that
extremists were able to hit high-profile targets in Brussels, Europe's symbolic
capital, just months after IS group militants killed 130 people in Paris, will
raise fresh questions about the continent's ability to cope with the terror
threat.
It also
underscores doubts about how Belgium has allowed extremism to develop
unchecked, coming just four days after the dramatic arrest in Brussels of key
Paris suspect Salah Abdeslam after four months on the run.
"This is a
day of tragedy, a black day," Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel said
and announced three days of national mourning after the "deadliest attacks
we have ever seen in Belgium".
A map of the Brussels airport terrorist attack (Image: CNBC) |
Belgian King
Philippe condemned the "cowardly and odious" assault.
The Islamic
State claimed the bombings, saying "soldiers of the caliphate" had
carried out the attack against "the crusader state" of Belgium.
Hundreds of
flights and trains were cancelled Tuesday as security across Europe was
tightened after the bombings, which Michel branded "blind, violent and
cowardly".
But he insisted
Belgium would not be cowed.
"People
were just going to work, to school and they have been cut down by the most
extreme barbarity," Michel told a news conference. "We will continue
to protect liberty, our way of life."
About an hour
after the airport blasts at around 8:00 am (0700 GMT), a third explosion rocked
Maalbeek metro station, in the heart of the city's EU quarter, just as
commuters were making their way to work.
A map of the second blast that occurred in the city Maelbeek metro station (Image: CNBC) |
The city is the
headquarters of both NATO and the European Union.
Belgian
authorities published surveillance camera images showing three male suspects
pushing trolleys with suitcases past the check-in area. Two have dark hair and
were both wearing a glove on only one hand, and a third, being hunted by
Belgian police, is wearing a hat and a white coat.
Several raids
were also under way across Belgium, the federal prosecutor said, adding that a
bomb, an Islamic State flag and chemicals had been found in one apartment.
Belgian
authorities had been on alert after Abdeslam, Europe's most wanted man, told
investigators he had been planning an attack on Brussels.
Pierre Meys,
spokesman for the Brussels fire brigade, told AFP at least 14 people had been
killed at the airport, while Brussels mayor Yvan Mayeur said "around
20" died in the metro blast.
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Rescuers help people after the metro bombing in Brussels (Image: RT) |
Witnesses
described horrific scenes at the airport, with victims lying in pools of blood,
their limbs blown off.
There were
chaotic scenes as passengers fled in panic, and plumes of dark smoke could be
seen rising from holes punched through the roof of the building by the blasts.
"A man
shouted a few words in Arabic and then I heard a huge blast," airport
baggage security officer Alphonse Lyoura told AFP, his hands bloodied.
"A lot of
people lost limbs. One man had lost both legs and there was a policeman with a
totally mangled leg."
An army team
later blew up a third unexploded suspect package at the shuttered airport.
At Maalbeek
station, paramedics tended to commuters with bloodied faces as the city's
normally peaceful streets filled with the wailing of sirens.
Blocked roads in the city after the double terrorist attack (Image: CBC) |
Airports across
Europe swiftly announced they were boosting security, while across the
Atlantic, New York and Washington ordered security personnel to crowded areas
and train stations.
Leaders across
Europe reacted with outrage, urging closer counter-terror cooperation on a
continent that has been on high alert for months.
The 28 EU
leaders issued a rare joint statement saying they would combat terrorism
"with all necessary means" after what they called "an attack on
our open democratic society."
CCTV pictures of the suspected terrorists (Image: CBC) |
"The whole
of Europe has been hit," said French President Francois Hollande, whose
country is still reeling from November's attacks.
British Prime
Minister David Cameron warned of the "very real" terrorist threat
faced by countries across Europe, declaring: "We will never left these
terrorists win."
US President Barack
Obama said Washington stood with Belgium in the face of the
"outrageous" attacks while UN chief Ban Ki-moon said those
responsible for the "despicable" bombings" should face justice.
Russia and
Turkey -- also targets of deadly attacks in the last eight months -- said the
blasts highlighted the need to fight terrorism of every hue and across all
borders.
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