Brussels raids: Paris attack suspect Abdeslam arrested
- 18 March 2016
- From the section Europe
Paris attacks suspect Salah Abdeslam has been wounded and arrested in a raid in Brussels, officials have said.
Two other men have also been arrested, Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel has said.
French President Francois Hollande said he expected Abdeslam to be extradited to France "as rapidly as possible".
The raid came after his fingerprints were found in a Brussels flat that was raided on Tuesday.
Abdeslam, on the run since the attacks on 13 November, was wounded in the leg as police moved in on a flat in the Molenbeek area.
Dramatic footage shows him being bundled into a police car after a volley of gunfire.
One of Europe's most wanted men, Abdeslam is a key suspect in the jihadist attacks in Paris in which 130 people died.
Mr Michel said the raid had come after "intense" detective work.
"It's a very important result in the battle for democracy, for the values that we want to embody against this abominable form of obscurantism," he said, speaking alongside Mr Hollande.
The French president said Abdeslam's arrest was an "important moment" but added that it was not the "final conclusion".
"We realise that there were many more people than we at first thought," ," he said.
"We must catch all those who allowed, organised or facilitated these attacks and we realise that they are a lot more numerous than we thought earlier and had identified."
Possible accomplices
The raid in Molenbeek followed the discovery of Abdeslam's fingerprints in a flat in the southern Forest suburb of Brussels that was raided on Tuesday, although prosecutors said the prints could not be dated.
One man - identified as Algerian national Mohamed Belkaid and linked to the Paris attacks - was shot dead in Tuesday's raid.
Officials said at the time they believed as many as two other suspects may have escaped.
The man killed on Tuesday, Belkaid, is believed to have used a false ID in the name of Samir Bouzid, while crossing the border between Austria and Hungary with Abdeslam and another man last September, the Belgian prosecutor's office said.
The false ID was also used four days after the Paris attacks at a Western Union office in Brussels to transfer money to Hasna Aitboulahcen, who Belgian prosecutors say was the niece of the suspected ringleader of the Paris attacks, Abdelhamid Abaaoud.
Both Abaaoud and Aitboulahcen died during a police raid on a flat in the Paris suburb of Saint-Denis. days after the Paris attacks.
Abdeslam, a 26-year-old French national born in Brussels, had lived in Molenbeek before the Paris attacks.
Is Molenbeek a haven for Belgian jihadis?
What happened during the Paris attacks?
He is believed to have returned to Belgium immediately after the attacks, in which his brother Brahim blew himself up.
In January, police said they may have found a bomb factory in the Schaerbeek district of Brussels used as a hideout by Abdeslam.
Police found traces of explosives, three handmade belts and a fingerprint of the suspect.
Manhunt
Abdeslam has been the subject of a massive manhunt since the attacks, claimed by militants from the so-called Islamic State (IS) group.
Officials have identified most of the people they believe to have carried out the assaults.
Most of the suspects either died during the attacks or were killed in subsequent police raids.
Parts of Brussels were sealed off for days after the Paris massacre amid fears of a major incident.
A number of suspected attackers lived in the Belgian capital, and police have carried out a series of raids.
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