Brussels attacks: Suspect admits to being 'man in the hat'

Mohamed Abrini admits to being the "man in the hat" seen with two suicide bombers at Brussels airport on March 22, Belgium's federal prosecutor says.

Belgium

Mohamed Abrini admits to being the "man in the hat". Source: AAP

A man held on terrorism charges in Belgium admits to being the "man in a hat" seen on security camera footage at Brussels airport with two suicide bombers before attacks in the city killed 32 people, public prosecutors say.

They said that after being confronted with footage prepared by an investigational unit, Belgian Mohamed Abrini said he was the man police had been hunting since the bombings at the airport and on the metro on March 22.

"He had no other choice," a spokesman for Belgium's public prosecutors said on Saturday. He had been held since Friday evening.

Abrini had been on Europe's most wanted list since December, after he was caught by a security camera at a motorway service station with suspected militant Salah Abdeslam while they drove to Paris two days before the attacks there that killed 130 people in November.
With the arrests and deaths in Brussels since a raid on March 15 put police on the trail of Abdeslam, all of the main known suspects in the Paris and Brussels attacks appear to have been taken off Europe's streets.

After leaving the airport, Abrini had thrown his light coat in a dust bin and later sold his hat, prosecutors added.

"He is charged with participation in the activities of a terrorist group and terrorist murder," the Belgian federal prosecutors office said in a statement.

Prosecutors charged four people, including Abrini, with terrorist activity for their suspected roles in the Brussels bombings and November's Paris attacks.

They were arrested on Friday, along with two others who were later released. Belgian police raided a suspected safe house in central Brussels on Saturday but found no weapons or explosives and made no further arrests.

Prosecutors said they also charged Osama K, who local media said was a Swede named Osama Krayem, adding they were able to identify him as the man present at the time of the attack on the Brussels metro station that same day.

Osama K was seen buying the bags used in the Brussels attacks in a shopping centre there, prosecutors said.

The other two were Bilal El Makhoukhi, who had already been convicted for working with jihadist recruiters, and a Rwandan named Herve B.M. on charges of helping Abrini and Osama K.

Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel said his government would continue to be vigilant about the militant threat.
"We are positive about the recent developments in the investigation. But we know we have to stay alert and cautious," he told a news conference in Brussels.

El Makhoukhi was convicted in January last year for being involved in Sharia4Belgium, a now disbanded organisation that recruited people to fight alongside jihadist organisations in Syria and Iraq, Belgium's Justice Minister Koen Geens said.

Originally sentenced to five years in prison, with three years suspended, he was allowed to serve his remaining term at home under electronic monitoring and was released last month, Geens told reporters.

El Makhoukhi was convicted last year following his return to Belgium after losing a leg while fighting in Syria.


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Source: AAP



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