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ISIS claims responsibility for Brussels attacks

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ISIS claims responsibility for Brussels attacks

Lorne Cook and John-Thor Dahlburg, The Associated Press
First posted: Tuesday, March 22, 2016 06:30 AM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, March 22, 2016 03:15 PM EDT

[video=youtube;ABpjiguckKs]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ABpjiguckKs[/video]

BRUSSELS -- Bombs exploded Tuesday at the Brussels airport and in the city's subway, killing at least 31 people and wounding dozens, as a European capital was again locked down amid heightened security threats. The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the attacks.

The two airport blasts, at least one of them blamed on a suicide bomber, left behind a chaotic scene of splattered blood in the departure lounge as windows were blown out, ceilings collapsed and travellers streamed out of the smoky building.

About an hour later, another bomb exploded on a rush-hour subway train near the European Union headquarters. Terrified passengers had to evacuate through darkened tunnels to safety.

"What we feared has happened," Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel said. "In this time of tragedy, this black moment for our country, I appeal to everyone to remain calm but also to show solidarity."

Belgium raised its terror alert to the highest level, diverting planes and trains and ordering people to stay where they were for most of the workday.

Authorities also released a photo taken from closed-circuit TV of three men pushing luggage carts, saying two of them apparently were the suicide bombers and that the third -- dressed in a light-colored coat, black hat and glasses -- was at large. They urged the public to contact them if they recognized him.

Police later conducted raids in Brussels searching for one of the suspects, and found a nail-filled bomb, chemical products and an Islamic State flag in the search of a house in the Schaerbeek neighbourhood, the state prosecutors' office said in a statement.

Airports across Europe -- and in the New York area -- tightened security.

"We are at war," French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said after a crisis meeting in Paris. "We have been subjected for the last few months in Europe to acts of war."

Added French President Francois Hollande: "Terrorists struck Brussels, but it was Europe that was targeted, and it is all the world which is concerned by this."

European security officials have been bracing for a major attack for weeks and warned that the Islamic State group was actively preparing to strike. The arrest Friday of Salah Abdeslam, a key suspect in the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris, heightened those fears, as investigators said many more people were involved than originally thought and that some are still on the loose.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the Brussels attacks, saying in a post on the group's Amaq news agency that its extremists opened fire in the airport and "several of them" detonated suicide belts. It said another suicide attacker struck in the subway. The post claimed the attack was in response to Belgium's support of the international coalition arrayed against the group.

Authorities found and neutralized a third bomb at the airport once the chaos after the two initial blasts had eased, said Florence Muls, a spokeswoman for the airport told The Associated Press. Bomb squads also detonated suspicious objects found in at least two locations elsewhere in the capital, but neither contained explosives, authorities said.

Michel said there was no immediate evidence linking the attacks with Abdeslam. After his arrest, Abdeslam told authorities he had created a new network and was planning new attacks.

U.S. President Barack Obama pledged to "do whatever is necessary" to help Belgian authorities seek justice.

"We stand in solidarity with them in condemning these outrageous attacks against innocent people," Obama said in Havana, where he was closing a three-day visit.

Western Europe has lived for decades under the threat of violence from homegrown nationalist and revolutionary movements. Extremists from North Africa and the Middle East have attacked civilian targets without warning, ranging from France's 1960s war in Algeria through Libya's 1988 downing of an airline over Scotland to the 2004-05 attacks on the public transportation systems of London and Madrid.

Certain neighbourhoods in Brussels, like the Molenbeek quarter, have bred extremists and supplied foreign fighters. Plotters linked to the Paris attacks and others have either moved through or lived in parts of the city.

Tuesday's explosions at the airport in the Brussels suburb of Zaventem came shortly after 8 a.m., one of its busiest periods when thousands of people were inside. Belgian Health Minister Maggie de Block said 11 people were killed and 81 wounded. Eleven people had serious injuries, Marc Decramer of the Gasthuisberg hospital in Leuven told broadcaster VTM. The nails apparently came from one of the bombs.

Zach Mouzoun, who arrived on a flight from Geneva about 10 minutes before the first blast, told BFM television that the second, louder explosion brought down ceilings and ruptured pipes, mixing water with victims' blood.

"It was atrocious. The ceilings collapsed," he said. "There was blood everywhere, injured people, bags everywhere."

"We were walking in the debris. It was a war scene," he said.

Video from moments after the blasts showed travellers huddled next to check-in counters and lying near luggage and trolleys as dust and the cries of the wounded filled the air. Dazed people stumbled from the scene, some with clothes and shoes blown off.

Anthony Deloos, an airport worker for Swissport, which handles check-in and baggage services, said the first explosion took place near the counters where customers pay for overweight bags. He and a colleague said the second blast hit near a Starbucks cafe.

"I jumped into a luggage chute to be safe," Deloos said.

The subway bombing came after 9 a.m., killing 20 people and wounding more than 100, Mayor Yvan Majeur said.

"The metro was leaving Maelbeek station for Schuman when there was a really loud explosion," said Alexandre Brans, 32, wiping blood from his face. "It was panic everywhere. There were a lot of people in the metro."

Near the entrance to the station, rescue workers set up a makeshift medical treatment centre in a pub. Dazed and shocked morning commuters streamed from the metro entrances as police tried to set up a security cordon.

The airport was ordered closed for the rest of the day and CEO Arnaud Feist said the facility would be shut at least through Wednesday. About 600 flights in or out of Brussels were diverted or cancelled, Muls said.

The metro also was ordered closed as the city was locked down. By the end of the workday, city officials said residents could begin moving around on the streets of the capital and train stations were reopening. But Peter Mertens of the Belgian crisis centre said the threat of more attacks "is still real and serious."

At least one and possibly two Kalashnikovs were found in the departure lounge at the airport, according to a European security official in contact with a Belgian police official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk about the ongoing investigation. It was not immediately clear if the firearms were used in the attacks.

Travellers fled the airport as quickly as they could. In video shown on France's i-Tele television, men, women and children dashed from the terminal in different directions. Security officers patrolled a hall with blown-out paneling and ceiling panels covering the floor.

Marc Noel, 63, was about to board a Delta flight to Atlanta, to return to his home in Raleigh, North Carolina. A Belgian native, Noel said he was in an airport shop buying automotive magazines when the first blast struck about 50 yards away.

"People were crying, shouting -- children. It was a horrible experience," he said, adding that his decision to shop might have saved his life. "I would probably have been in that place when the bomb went off."



 

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Blood brothers: Brussels suicide bomber siblings abandoned street crime for jihad


PUBLISHED : Thursday, 24 March, 2016, 8:28am
UPDATED : Thursday, 24 March, 2016, 8:28am
Agence France-Presse

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Long before blowing themselves up in crowds of innocent people, suicide bomber Ibrahim El Bakraoui and his brother Khalid lived the lives of the classic Brussels hoodlum.

Carjackings, robberies and shoot-outs with police were just some of the convictions collected by the Belgian brothers who killed themselves in the metro and airport assaults in Brussels claimed by the Islamic State group.

Both were said to have links with top Paris attacks suspect Salah Abdeslam, while the third identified Brussels attacker, Najim Laachraoui, was the suspected bomb-maker for the November rampage in the French capital.

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Three men who are suspected of taking part in the attacks at Belgium's Zaventem Airport, including Ibrahim El Bakraoui (centre). The man on the right is believed to have survived the attack but the other two died in suicide blasts. Photo: AP

Baby-faced Ibrahim, 29, who blew himself up at the airport on Tuesday along with Laachraoui, had been given a nine-year sentence in 2010 after a gunfight with police, according to local media.

He took part in a bungled robbery at a Western Union office in which a police officer was injured in the leg.

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An apartment complex which was raided by Belgian police on Tuesday after twin bomb attacks in Brussels. The complex is believed to be linked to the Bakraoui brothers. Photo: AP

Turkey said it had detained Ibrahim in June last year as a “foreign terrorist fighter” and then deported him to the Netherlands.

President Recept Tayyip Erdogan said the Belgian authorities had failed to confirm his links to terrorism “despite our warnings” and had later released him, although it is not immediately clear when he crossed to Belgium from the Netherlands.

Ibrahim, seen on CCTV footage with two other suspects pushing airport trolleys with their bomb-laden bags, left a confused and scared message on an abandoned computer, according to the Belgian federal prosecutor.

“Hunted everywhere... no longer safe,” Ibrahim said in the message. “I don’t know what to do.”

His younger brother Khalid, 27, who blew himself at the Maalbeek metro station just a short walk from the main EU institutions, was a convicted carjacker, receiving a five-year sentence 2011, according to La Derniere Heure.

Federal prosecutors revealed Wednesday that both were Belgian citizens with convictions “not linked to terrorism”.

They burst into the public eye on March 15 when police raided an apartment in the Forest district of Brussels, as part of the investigation into the Paris attacks that killed 130 people.

Media reports said a joint squad of Belgian and French police approached the property because it was rented under a false name used by Khalid to secure a hideout months earlier for the Paris team.

Belgium filed an Interpol search for Khalid, who was suspected of renting other properties used to prepare the Paris attacks, including one in the southern Belgian city of Charleroi from where ringleader Abdelhamid Abaaoud set off to spearhead the assault.

The police last week fully expected to find an abandoned property, as utilities in the Brussels apartment had been shut off for weeks.

Instead they came under heavy gunfire, with one assailant killed and two men fleeing - including, it is thought, Salah Abdeslam, then Europe’s most wanted man who would be arrested three days later.

The brothers were not believed to have been present but their connection to Islamic State jihadism was established.

The second airport bomber was named as Najim Laachraoui, 24, who was captured on the CCTV footage with Ibrahim and another assailant who is the subject of a massive manhunt after his bomb did not go off and he fled the scene.

Investigators have found traces of Laachraoui’s DNA on explosives used in the Paris gun and suicide bomb assaults, including at the Bataclan rock venue where 90 people died.

DNA traces were also found in a rural Belgian hideout used on the eve of the Paris attacks, as well as in a suspected bomb factory in the Schaarbeek district of Brussels.

Moroccan-born Laachraoui grew up in Schaarbeek and had been wanted by police over the Paris attacks since December, though by a false identity that was only unmasked last week.

Laachraoui attended Schaarbeek’s Sainte-Famille Catholic school for six years where an official said he was a “typical” student.

He received his baccalaureat, the equivalent of a high-school diploma, in 2009.

A newsletter posted on the school website indicated he studied electronics, but the official would not confirm this.

Laachraoui went to Syria in September 2013 in one of the first waves of jihadists to leave Belgium for the war-torn country, where he fought under the Islamic State nom de guerre Abu Idriss, according to media reports.

In February, a Belgian court convicted him in absentia for his involvement with IS.

He was known to have returned to Europe in September when he was checked by police under a false identity in a Mercedes driven by Abdeslam, who now sits behind bars in Belgium.

Also in the car was the Algerian Mohamed Belkaid, 35, shot dead during the March 15 search and gun battle in Brussels that eventually led to Abdeslam’s capture.


 

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3 Hong Kong officials narrowly escape Islamic State bombing at Brussels airport


Officials from Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in Brussels had just gone through airport security checks when the bombs went off; they had to be evacuated

PUBLISHED : Wednesday, 23 March, 2016, 10:43pm
UPDATED : Thursday, 24 March, 2016, 2:45pm
Nikki Sun Peace Chiu Stuart Lau

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Three Hong Kong government *officials narrowly escaped the deadly attack in Brussels on Tuesday after passing through airport security shortly before the bombing took place.

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Alice Choi, deputy representative of the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in Brussels, along with two colleagues were due to board a plane to Milan for a duty visit on Tuesday morning, but were unable to fly due to the attack at Brussels airport.

“I saw a big group of people running into the waiting area beyond the security check,” Choi told the Post in an email. “All *departures and arrivals were put on hold after the incident.”

Choi said they were later evacuated from the terminal building.

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Chief Secretary Carrie Lam signs the condolence book at the Belgian consulate in Hong Kong. Photo: Dickson Lee

All 19 officers working in the Hong Kong office, including five from Hong Kong, were confirmed to be safe, a government spokeswoman told the Post.

However, Choi did manage to explain the benefits of Beijing’s “One Belt, One Road” initiative to the Italian businessmen she was meant to meet in Milan – albeit over the phone.

Asked whether she would leave in the wake of the bombings, Choi said: “It is our mission to promote Hong Kong in Europe. We will stay until the end of our assignment here which normally lasts three years.”

“[The Brussels office] strongly condemns all kinds of terrorist attacks,” the office said in a statement.

It also said it would handle work arrangements for staff in a “flexible manner” by striking a balance between “maintaining the operation of the office and protecting the personal safety of the officers”.
Do Brussels bombings signal a shift in Islamic State focus to reassert its destructive capability in Europe?

Winne Ko, a Hongkonger who has lived in and around Brussels since 2012, used to live in Molenbeek, the town thrust into the international spotlight since the Paris attacks. Most of the key suspects lived there.

“I lived just a few blocks away from where [Paris bombing suspect] Salah Abdeslam was captured, but I never felt unsafe,” said Ko, who moved from Brussels in 2013 but still commutes there regularly for work. “I didn’t imagine terrorism could be so near.”

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Police and soldiers from the Belgian army stand in front of blown out windows at Zaventem Airport in Brussels. Photo: AP

Ko, a research consultant for an NGO on cancer prevention, said the city was not so dangerous that she would immediately leave. “But I will definitely be more vigilant,” she said.

Dignitaries, Belgians and Hongkongers condemned Tuesday’s attacks and expressed sympathy and support for the Belgian people at the country’s Hong Kong consulate, where a condolence book was opened.

Among the people who visited the consulate were Chief Secretary Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor and European Union representative Vincent Piket.

“We share the pain of their family and friends. We must not allow terrorism to continue to haunt mankind. Let’s pray together for world peace,” Lam wrote in the book.

Piket said there was “no excuse” for any type of violence.“We have to be very vigilant against the threats of terrorism, and cooperate and show a lot of solidarity to make sure this kind of incident does not happen again,” he said.

Miroslaw Adamczyk, consul general of Poland, wrote that he was “deeply shocked” by another “brutal attack” and called for the world to “stand united” in the fight against terrorism.




 

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Chinese national, Briton and two Americans among Brussels attacks victims


PUBLISHED : Friday, 25 March, 2016, 7:23pm
UPDATED : Friday, 25 March, 2016, 11:10pm
Reuters

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A Chinese national was among those killed in Tuesday’s Islamic State suicide bombings in Brussels, state media said on Friday, citing China’s embassy in the country.

The official People’s Daily identified the person by their family name, Deng, adding that they had initially been listed as missing.

The embassy expressed its condolences and again strongly condemned the attack, the newspaper added.

At least 31 dead after terrorist attack on Brussels; bomb blasts hit airport and metro station

Deng was on his way to a third country from China and changing planes at Brussels when the explosion took place. His family have been informed and the embassy says it will provide assistance if they want to go to Belgium.

The embassy added that there are still some Chinese citizens stranded in Brussels due to the closure of the airport.

Earlier, a senior US official said two Americans were killed in Tuesday’s attacks, as US Secretary of State John Kerry met with Belgian leaders and offered condolences and help.

Brussels attacks: six arrested in anti-terror raids, as security failings emerge

The official did not offer specifics on where the Americans died, saying only that two had been confirmed killed.

Kerry, travelling back to Washington after talks in Moscow, stopped in Belgium to demonstrate solidarity after the attacks, which killed 31 people and injured hundreds of others.

“The United States is praying and grieving with you for the loved ones of those cruelly taken from us, including Americans, and for the many who were injured in these despicable attacks,” Kerry said after meeting Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel.

“The United States stands firmly with Belgium and with the nations of Europe in the face of this tragedy,” he said.

“We will continue to provide any assistance necessary in investigating these heinous acts of terrorism and bringing those responsible to justice,” Kerry added.

First Boston, now Brussels ... the teenager who survived two deadly terror bombings

Michel offered his condolences for the death of the Americans, but did not elaborate. “We want to cooperate with you, do our best with you in order to face these very sensitive issues,” he said.

At the same time, Britain’s Foreign Officer said a British citizen died during the attacks in Brussels earlier this week. They confirmed that David Dixon, a computer programmer living in Brussels, was killed in the bombing on the Brussels subway.

Officials said seven other British nationals were injured, too.

Dixon’s family has asked for privacy and indicated no statements will be made.



 

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Belgium charges suspect in Brussels airport bombing

PUBLISHED : Saturday, 26 March, 2016, 11:19pm
UPDATED : Saturday, 26 March, 2016, 11:19pm

Agence France-Presse

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Belgium on Saturday charged a man believed to be the fugitive third Brussels airport bomber with terrorism murder, in a breakthrough for security forces facing criticism for letting suspects slip through the net.

A huge manhunt netted the suspect officially identified as Faycal C – and identified by local media as Faycal Cheffou – and investigators are now working on the theory that he could be the man in a hat and white jacket pictured with two other airport bombers, but whose device failed to go off.

Brussels airport said it will not reopen before Tuesday at the earliest as it implements new security measures and repairs the departure hall wrecked by the bombers, believed to be from the Islamic State group.

Belgians in mourning will gather Sunday for a rally in a central Brussels square now carpeted with flowers and tributes to the 31 killed and 300 injured in the March 22 metro and airport bombs, with a national solidarity march also planned.

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An image from security camera video of a suspect in the Zaventem airport attack identified as Faycal Cheffou. Photo: EPA

Prosecutors meanwhile also charged a man arrested in Belgium over a new plot to hit Paris, deepening the connections in what French President Francois Hollande has described as a single terror cell straddling both France and Belgium.

The Belgian government faces a torrent of criticism at home and abroad, with key ministers on the back foot saying they had done everything possible to prevent Tuesday’s attacks and track a network also linked to November’s Paris attacks.

Many believe it failed to stop young Belgian fighters going to Syria to join Islamic State (IS) – which claimed the attacks – and then returning home battle-hardened and more extremist than before.

“It is an endless nightmare for a country turned upside down,” said Le Soir daily in a front-page editorial.

Heavily armed soldiers and police remained on patrol in the capital and Zaventem airport.

In an indication the city is still on edge, a bomb disposal squad carried out a controlled detonation on a southern Brussels street to destroy a suspect backpack.

Pop diva Mariah Carey on Friday cancelled a show in Brussels, saying she was advised to do so “for the safety of my fans, my band, crew and everyone involved with the tour”.

In contrast, veteran French rock star Johnny Hallyday was going ahead with two planned concerts in Brussels over the weekend.

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An unidentified woman lies on the ground in a smoke filled terminal at Brussels Airport after the explosions on March 22. Photo: AP

Prosecutors said Faycal C was one of three people arrested outside the Belgian federal prosecutor’s office in Brussels on Thursday night as part of a huge sweep of detentions across Belgium and Europe.

“He has been charged with taking part in a terrorist group, terrorist murder and attempted terrorist murder,” the prosecutor said.

Asked by AFP if Faycal C. was the suspected third bomber dubbed the “man in the hat”, a source close to the inquiry said: “That is a hypothesis the investigators are working on.”

Local media named the suspect as Faycal Cheffou, a freelance journalist.

He is the first person charged with terror offences over the Brussels attacks, the worst in the history of a country that is home to the European Union and the Nato military alliance.

A second suspect named as Rabah N. linked to a foiled plot in France was charged with taking part in terrorist activities.

French police said Friday they had foiled a terror strike in France by 34-year-old Reda Kriket – a man previously convicted in Belgium in a terror case alongside Paris attacks ringleader Abdelhamid Abaaoud – after arresting him and discovering explosives at his home.

A suspect shot in the leg Friday at a tram stop in the Schaerbeek district of Brussels is being held for another 24 hours as investigations into the French plot continue.

Belgium’s ageing nuclear power plants have also come under scrutiny as a possible terror risk, with the EU’s anti-terror chief Gilles de Kerchove telling La Libre Belgique newspaper they face the threat of a terrorist cyberattack over the next five years.

According to reports, a security guard at a Belgian nuclear power plant was murdered Thursday and his access badge stolen. Prosecutors denied any terror link, Belga news agency reported, and said that in fact the man worked at a medical research facility that used radioactive isotopes.

These reports follow the discovery by investigators last year of surveillance footage of a nuclear plant official in the flat of a suspect linked to the Brussels and Paris attacks.

European authorities are under huge pressure to better coordinate the tracking of home grown extremists and fighters returning from Syria.

The Belgian government has admitted “errors” and two ministers offered to resign after Turkey said it had arrested and deported Ibrahim el-Bakraoui, who blew himself up in the airport attack.

Ibrahim and his brother Khalid, the suicide bomber in the metro attack, were also on a US counterterrorism watch list, CNN reported.

Belgian prosecutors have said that the DNA of second airport bomber Najim Laachraoui was found on a suicide vest and a piece of cloth at the Bataclan concert hall where 90 people were killed during November’s Paris attacks, and on a bomb at the Stade de France stadium.

Harrowing stories continued to emerge from survivors of the attacks, in which people of around 40 nationalities were killed or wounded.

Briton David Dixon, 51, who lived in Brussels, texted his aunt after the airport blasts to say he was safe, but happened to be on the metro system and died when a suicide bomber blew himself up at the Maalbeek station near Brussels’ EU quarter, British media said.



 

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Whenever there is a big story in the mass media, look for the story that they are distracting you from.

As in all previous so called terrorist bombings, the pattern is clear: media inflates the story by spicing it up with horrifying pictures coupling that with a familiar storyline.

Whenever ISIS is mentioned the real target is invariably Syria.

Neocolonialism: ISIS is a divide and conquer colonial tool of NATO nations to smuggle oil out of Syria.

The masterminds behind ISIS are benefitting: smuggled ISIS oil costs $30 per barrel, much less as compared to $60-70 per barrel in the international market.

Much of this oil goes to Europe and some to Israel, which is why ISIS and Israel don't fight each other when they should be at each other's throats.

Israel is one of the main sponsors of ISIS imperialist black ops.

http://theantimedia.org/how-the-war-in-syria-is-about-oil-not-isis/


The attacks in Belgium is no different. It is a continuation of the same pattern of brutal neoconservative powermongering and neocolonialism.

All these attacks have the same cause and the same effect: Neocons demonizing Syria somewhere in the world and then bombing it.

A geological survey puts the amount of oil under Syria as mountainous, which can fuel the neocon's world for up to 960 years or nearly a thousand years.

Greed is the driving force behind all these capitalistic bombings.

It's criminal, pejorative and cruel.



ISIS claims responsibility for Brussels attacks

Lorne Cook and John-Thor Dahlburg, The Associated Press
First posted: Tuesday, March 22, 2016 06:30 AM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, March 22, 2016 03:15 PM EDT

[video=youtube;ABpjiguckKs]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ABpjiguckKs[/video]

BRUSSELS -- Bombs exploded Tuesday at the Brussels airport and in the city's subway, killing at least 31 people and wounding dozens, as a European capital was again locked down amid heightened security threats. The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the attacks.

The two airport blasts, at least one of them blamed on a suicide bomber, left behind a chaotic scene of splattered blood in the departure lounge as windows were blown out, ceilings collapsed and travellers streamed out of the smoky building.

About an hour later, another bomb exploded on a rush-hour subway train near the European Union headquarters. Terrified passengers had to evacuate through darkened tunnels to safety.

"What we feared has happened," Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel said. "In this time of tragedy, this black moment for our country, I appeal to everyone to remain calm but also to show solidarity."

Belgium raised its terror alert to the highest level, diverting planes and trains and ordering people to stay where they were for most of the workday.

Authorities also released a photo taken from closed-circuit TV of three men pushing luggage carts, saying two of them apparently were the suicide bombers and that the third -- dressed in a light-colored coat, black hat and glasses -- was at large. They urged the public to contact them if they recognized him.

Police later conducted raids in Brussels searching for one of the suspects, and found a nail-filled bomb, chemical products and an Islamic State flag in the search of a house in the Schaerbeek neighbourhood, the state prosecutors' office said in a statement.

Airports across Europe -- and in the New York area -- tightened security.

"We are at war," French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said after a crisis meeting in Paris. "We have been subjected for the last few months in Europe to acts of war."

Added French President Francois Hollande: "Terrorists struck Brussels, but it was Europe that was targeted, and it is all the world which is concerned by this."

European security officials have been bracing for a major attack for weeks and warned that the Islamic State group was actively preparing to strike. The arrest Friday of Salah Abdeslam, a key suspect in the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris, heightened those fears, as investigators said many more people were involved than originally thought and that some are still on the loose.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the Brussels attacks, saying in a post on the group's Amaq news agency that its extremists opened fire in the airport and "several of them" detonated suicide belts. It said another suicide attacker struck in the subway. The post claimed the attack was in response to Belgium's support of the international coalition arrayed against the group.

Authorities found and neutralized a third bomb at the airport once the chaos after the two initial blasts had eased, said Florence Muls, a spokeswoman for the airport told The Associated Press. Bomb squads also detonated suspicious objects found in at least two locations elsewhere in the capital, but neither contained explosives, authorities said.

Michel said there was no immediate evidence linking the attacks with Abdeslam. After his arrest, Abdeslam told authorities he had created a new network and was planning new attacks.

U.S. President Barack Obama pledged to "do whatever is necessary" to help Belgian authorities seek justice.

"We stand in solidarity with them in condemning these outrageous attacks against innocent people," Obama said in Havana, where he was closing a three-day visit.

Western Europe has lived for decades under the threat of violence from homegrown nationalist and revolutionary movements. Extremists from North Africa and the Middle East have attacked civilian targets without warning, ranging from France's 1960s war in Algeria through Libya's 1988 downing of an airline over Scotland to the 2004-05 attacks on the public transportation systems of London and Madrid.

Certain neighbourhoods in Brussels, like the Molenbeek quarter, have bred extremists and supplied foreign fighters. Plotters linked to the Paris attacks and others have either moved through or lived in parts of the city.

Tuesday's explosions at the airport in the Brussels suburb of Zaventem came shortly after 8 a.m., one of its busiest periods when thousands of people were inside. Belgian Health Minister Maggie de Block said 11 people were killed and 81 wounded. Eleven people had serious injuries, Marc Decramer of the Gasthuisberg hospital in Leuven told broadcaster VTM. The nails apparently came from one of the bombs.

Zach Mouzoun, who arrived on a flight from Geneva about 10 minutes before the first blast, told BFM television that the second, louder explosion brought down ceilings and ruptured pipes, mixing water with victims' blood.

"It was atrocious. The ceilings collapsed," he said. "There was blood everywhere, injured people, bags everywhere."

"We were walking in the debris. It was a war scene," he said.

Video from moments after the blasts showed travellers huddled next to check-in counters and lying near luggage and trolleys as dust and the cries of the wounded filled the air. Dazed people stumbled from the scene, some with clothes and shoes blown off.

Anthony Deloos, an airport worker for Swissport, which handles check-in and baggage services, said the first explosion took place near the counters where customers pay for overweight bags. He and a colleague said the second blast hit near a Starbucks cafe.

"I jumped into a luggage chute to be safe," Deloos said.

The subway bombing came after 9 a.m., killing 20 people and wounding more than 100, Mayor Yvan Majeur said.

"The metro was leaving Maelbeek station for Schuman when there was a really loud explosion," said Alexandre Brans, 32, wiping blood from his face. "It was panic everywhere. There were a lot of people in the metro."

Near the entrance to the station, rescue workers set up a makeshift medical treatment centre in a pub. Dazed and shocked morning commuters streamed from the metro entrances as police tried to set up a security cordon.

The airport was ordered closed for the rest of the day and CEO Arnaud Feist said the facility would be shut at least through Wednesday. About 600 flights in or out of Brussels were diverted or cancelled, Muls said.

The metro also was ordered closed as the city was locked down. By the end of the workday, city officials said residents could begin moving around on the streets of the capital and train stations were reopening. But Peter Mertens of the Belgian crisis centre said the threat of more attacks "is still real and serious."

At least one and possibly two Kalashnikovs were found in the departure lounge at the airport, according to a European security official in contact with a Belgian police official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk about the ongoing investigation. It was not immediately clear if the firearms were used in the attacks.

Travellers fled the airport as quickly as they could. In video shown on France's i-Tele television, men, women and children dashed from the terminal in different directions. Security officers patrolled a hall with blown-out paneling and ceiling panels covering the floor.

Marc Noel, 63, was about to board a Delta flight to Atlanta, to return to his home in Raleigh, North Carolina. A Belgian native, Noel said he was in an airport shop buying automotive magazines when the first blast struck about 50 yards away.

"People were crying, shouting -- children. It was a horrible experience," he said, adding that his decision to shop might have saved his life. "I would probably have been in that place when the bomb went off."



 
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