Brussels ISIL terror cell

The Brussels ISIL terror cell are a group of people who have been connected to large-scale attacks in Paris and Brussels, as well as other smaller scale terror attacks against European targets. The terror cell is connected to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), a jihadist terrorist organisation primarily based in Syria and Iraq and led by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

Background

Before those attacks, several other Islamist terrorist attacks had originated from Belgium, and a number of counter-terrorist operations had been carried out there. In 2014, a gunman with ties to the Syrian Civil War attacked the Jewish Museum of Belgium in Brussels, killing four people.[1][2] In January 2015, anti-terrorist operations against a group thought to be planning a second Charlie Hebdo shooting had included raids in Brussels and Zaventem. The operation resulted in the deaths of two suspects.[3][4] In August 2015, a suspected terrorist shot and stabbed passengers aboard a high-speed train on its way from Amsterdam to Paris via Brussels, before he was subdued by passengers.[5]

Belgium has more nationals fighting for jihadist forces as a proportion of its population than any other Western European country, with an estimated 440 Belgians having left for Syria and Iraq as of January 2015.[6][7] Due to Belgium's weak security apparatus and competing intelligence agencies, it has become a hub of jihadist-recruiting and terrorist activity.[8]

Main suspects

Abdelhamid Abaaoud

Main article: Abdelhamid Abaaoud

Abdelhamid Abaaoud (8 April 1987 – 18 November 2015) was a Belgian-Moroccan[9][10][11] Islamic terrorist, who had spent time in Syria, known as a place where radical groups operate and train.[12] He was suspected of having organized multiple terror attacks in Belgium and France, and is known to have masterminded in the November 2015 Paris attacks.[13] Prior to the Paris attacks, there was an international arrest warrant issued for Abaaoud for his activities in recruiting individuals to Islamic terrorism in Syria.[14]

Salah Abdeslam

Main article: Salah Abdeslam

Salah Abdeslam (born 15 September 1989) is a Belgian-born French national of Moroccan descent.[15][16] He is accused of involvement in the attacks in Paris on 13 November 2015, through providing logistical support for the assailants and driving them to their target locations.[15] He is thought to have been in charge of logistics for the group.[17]

Paris assailants

Nationalities of the terrorists[18]
Country Number from country
 France
5
 Belgium
2
 Iraq
2

Three teams, comprising three people each, executed the attacks.[18][19] They wore explosive vests and belts with identical detonators.[20] Seven perpetrators died at the scenes of their attacks.[21][22] The other two were killed five days later during the Saint-Denis police raid.

Three suicide bombers blew themselves up near the Stade de France:

Two men alongside Abdelhamid Abaaoud[35][23] are thought to have carried out the shootings at bars and restaurants in Paris:

Three other men attacked the Bataclan theatre using AKMs and took hostages.[36] Two blew themselves up when police raided the theatre. The third was hit by police gunfire and his vest blew up when he fell.[36] According to French police, they were:

Brussels suspects

Ibrahim El Bakraoui

Main article: Ibrahim El Bakraoui

Khalid El Bakraoui

Main article: Khalid El Bakraoui

Najim Laachraoui

Main article: Najim Laachraoui

Mohamed Abrini

Main article: Mohamed Abrini

Osama Krayem

Main article: Osama Krayem

Other suspects

November 2015 Paris attacks

On 14 November, a car was stopped at the Belgium–France border and its three occupants were questioned then released. Three more people were arrested in Molenbeek.[45] Links to the attacks were investigated in an arrest in Germany on 5 November, when police stopped a 51-year-old man from Montenegro and found automatic handguns, hand grenades and explosives in his car.[46]

On 15–16 November, French tactical police units raided over 200 locations in France, arresting 23 people and seizing weapons.[47] Another 104 people were placed under house arrest.[48][49]

On 17 November, police followed a cousin of the attacker and ringleader, Abdelhamid Abaaoud, to a block of flats in Saint-Denis where they saw Abaaoud with her.[50][51] Following a police raid on a flat in Saint-Denis during the next day, in which Abaaoud and restaurant shooter Chakib Akrouh died, which lasted several hours,[52][53][54][39] eight suspected militants were arrested at or near the flat.[55]

On 24 November, five people in Belgium had been charged on suspicion of their involvement in the Paris attacks, and Belgian prosecutors issued an arrest warrant for Mohamed Abrini, a 30-year-old suspected accomplice of Salah Abdeslam.[56] Abrini was subsequently reported to have been arrested on 8 April 2016. He is also suspected of having been involved in the bombings in Brussels four months later.[57]

A person involved in the attacks made phone calls to Birmingham, England, just prior to the day of the attacks.[58]

Fabien Clain

Main article: Fabien Clain

Fabien Clain (born ca. 1977/1978) was identified as the person who released an audio recording the day before the Paris attacks in which he personally claimed responsibility for the attacks. Clain is known to intelligence services as a veteran jihadist belonging to ISIL, and of French nationality.[59] A French national, he served 5 years from 2009 to 2014 in a French prison for recruiting fighters to go to Syria to join militant groups. Clain has been linked to other executed and planned terror attacks and is seen as a leader of known terrorists.[60]

Arrests during 2016 Brussels raids

On 15 March, police carried out a raid on a house in Forest, a suburb of Brussels, in relation to the November 2015 Paris attacks.[61][62] Four police officers were wounded in the raid,[63] while one suspect was killed.[64] The deceased suspect was identified as Mohamed Belkaid, a 35-year-old Algerian citizen.[65]

Three days later on 18 March, a second raid was conducted in the Molenbeek area of Brussels.[66] Five people, including Salah Abdeslam, three of Abdeslam's relatives, and Monir Ahmed Alaaj, were arrested. Abdeslam and Alaaj were both injured during the raid.[67][68][69][70][71]

2016 Brussels bombings

On 24 March, six people were arrested in police raids in Brussels, Jette and Schaerbeek, all in connection with the investigation into the bombings.[72]

As of 26 March, twelve men were arrested in connection with the bombings.[73] The same day, Belgian prosecutors charged Fayçal Cheffou, who had been detained two days prior in front of the Belgian prosecutor's office, with "terrorist murders, attempted murder relating to terror plots, and links to terror groups"; Cheffou was suspected of being the man on the right in the CCTV footage of the airport.[74] However, on 28 March, Cheffou was released due to a lack of evidence.[75]

On 27 March, an Algerian who was part of a counterfeiting ring that provided forged documents to the perpetrators in both the Paris and Brussels attacks was arrested in Italy. The Belgian government had issued a European Arrest Warrant for the man, who the ANSA news agency identified as 40-year-old Djamal Eddine Ouali on 6 January. Ouali's name emerged during searches carried out in October in the Saint-Gilles borough of Brussels, which yielded around 1,000 digital images that were being used to make false identity documents.[76]

Two men were detained on 25 March but later exonerated for suspected connections to the cell. The first, a 28-year-old failed, Moroccan, male asylum-seeker, was detained following a routine police check in Giessen, Germany, for being in contact with the Brussels attackers' immediate network.[77] He had an acquaintance with a similar name to Khalid El Bakraoui, and a text message with the word "fin" was found on his cell phone; the "fin" was initially interpreted as "the end" in French, though it turned out to be the word "where" transcribed from Arabic language. The second man, identified only as Samir E., was arrested in Düsseldorf, Germany, in connection with the bombings.[78]

Planned terrorist activities

The cell initially planned to launch a second assault on Paris following the November 2015 attacks there. However, they chose to rush an attack on Brussels after being surprised by the progress of the French investigation.[79]

See also

References

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