Two dead in Brussels gun rampage: Man claiming to be ISIS member avenging stabbing murder of US-Palestinian boy, 6, opens fire on group wearing Swedish football shirts ahead of Euro 2024 qualifier – then goes on the run
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Brussels has been brought to a standstill after a gunman claiming to be a member of ISISĀ opened fire on a group of Swedish football fans – killing two people.
The gunman is said to have begun shooting at the men who were passing through Boulevard d’Ypres just a few minutes north of the city’s famous Grand Plaza.
The men were wearing their national team’s jerseys and wereĀ on their way to the match at King Baudouin Stadium. A third person is said to be seriously injured.
The alleged attacker used the name ‘Slayem Slouma’ to boast about the two murders on Facebook, adding he sought to avenge the killing of a six-year-old US-Palestinian boy.
Speaking in Arabic, he celebrated the slaughter, and said he committed them in the name of ISIS.
Police confirmed that the man in the video – wearing an orange jacket, black scarf, yellow baseball hat and heavy black beard – was the one they were searching for in relation to the attack.
Police spokeswoman Ilse Vande Keere said officers arrived soon at the scene in Brussels, and sealed off the immediate neighbourhood
The shooting comes at a time of increased vigilance linked to the Israel-Hamas war which has heightened tension in several European nations
A picture of the man – said to be involved in today’s shooting in Brussels – was captured in mobile phone footage
The man is reported to have said he was avenging the stabbing of six-year-old US-Palestinian boy Wadea Al-Fayoume, who was knifed to death in Plainfield, Illinois, on Saturday morning.
PoliceĀ at the site of a shooting incident in the Ieperlaan – Boulevard d’Ypres in Brussels
Belgium Prime Minister Alexander De Croo urged civilians to be vigilant and said: ‘My deepest condolences to the relatives of the cowardly assassination attempt in Brussels’
Forensic investigators at the scene in Brussels were two people were shot dead by a gunman
Players, fans and match officials observe a minute’s silence prior to match between Belgium and Sweden at King Baudouin Stadium
Sweden fans during the European Championship qualifying match between Belgium and Sweden at the King Baudouin Stadium
Harrowing footage taken by bystanders shows a man shooting several times using a large weapon while shouting in Arabic, as members of the public run for their lives.
Belgian newspaper Het Laatste Nieuws reportsĀ the gunman used an automatic rifle and fled the scene on his scooter.
He is reported to have said he was avenging the stabbing of six-year-old US-Palestinian boyĀ Wadea Al-Fayoume, who was knifed to deathĀ in Plainfield, Illinois, on Saturday morning.Ā
Wadea was stabbed 26 times and his mother, Hanaan Shahin, was stabbed over a dozen times, by a man allegedly screaming ‘You Muslims must die!’
Joseph Czuba, 71, is charged with murdering the boy.
The gunman was travelling on a moped, and was heard to shout ‘Allahu Akabar’ – Arab for God is the Greatest – by witnesses.
An investigating source said: ‘He was also screaming about carrying out a revenge attack. He was shooting at various people, and hit a number of them. This had all the hallmarks of a terrorist attack.’
The source said there was also a video circulating on social media in which the attacker explains having to ‘take revenge’ by killing three people from Sweden.
‘Two Swedish football fans died in a taxi, after being attacked by the man, who then got away on his moped,’ said the source.
The suspect, who was wearing a crash helmet and fluorescent jacket, was brandishing a ‘Kalashnikov-style’ weapon, and had also fired at man in the lobby of a nearby building.
Belgium’s National Crisis Centre raised the country’s terror alert to the highest level tonight.
Belgium Prime Minister Alexander De Croo urged civilians to be vigilant and said: ‘My deepest condolences to the relatives of the cowardly assassination attempt in Brussels’
‘I monitor developments together with the Ministers of Justice and Home Affairs from the national crisis center.’
The emergency services arrived in large numbers within minutes, but no suspect was arrested.
The investigating source said: ‘The alleged perpetrator has posted a video in which he is a member of ISIS’.Ā
Belgian police officers from the forensic service search for evidence in a street after two people were killed
Police cordon off an area where a shooting took place in the center of Brussels
Investigators search the scene left behind by a suspect who is on the run, the Belgian capital’s prosecutor’s office said
This photograph shows the police perimeter at the site of a shooting incident in the Ieperlaan – Boulevard d’Ypres
Belgian police secure the area after two people were shot dead in Brussels
The centre of Brussels was brought to a standstill after a lone gunman shot two people dead this evening
Belgium police stand at the site of a shooting incident
The claim was also published by Sudinfo, one of the largest news outlets in Belgium, which said the Facebook post shows the man ‘boasting about having murdered infidels.’Ā
It adds: ‘In his very violent speech, he said he had shot two people to avenge the Muslims and that we live and die for our religion.’Ā
A Belgium government spokesman said representatives of the country’s security services, public prosecutor’s office and cabinet had gathered at a Crisis Centre, to discuss the terrorist motive.Ā
‘All partners have indeed been called together,’ said Laura Demullier, spokesperson for the state Crisis Center.Ā
‘Everyone is asked to come here as soon as possible to discuss the next move.’
Police spokeswoman Ilse Vande Keere said officers arrived soon at the scene, and sealed off the immediate neighbourhood.
She declined to elaborate on the circumstances of the shooting.
There has also been controversy in Sweden over Charlie Hebdo-style cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.
A Brussels police spokesman said: ‘We are talking about two people dead, and they are believed to be Swedish.’
Belgium has suffered a series of terrorist attacks in recent years – all of it related to Islamist groups such as ISIS and Al-Qaeda.
Eight men have just been tried for their connections to the 2016 suicide bombings that killed 32 people and wounded hundreds at Brussels airport and a subway station.
In September, a Brussels court handed out sentences ranging up to life in prison to eight men for the jihadist bombings in Brussels.
French citizen Salah Abdeslam and Belgian-Moroccan Mohamed Abrini – already sentenced to life in jail by France for the November 2015 massacre in Paris – were the highest-profile of six defendants found guilty of murder in July.
Abrini, who was one of the intended bombers but decided not to blow himself up at the last moment, was given a 30-year jail term.
The court ruled not to give Abdeslam an additional term after he was sentenced in Belgium to 20 years in 2018 over a shootout.
The attacks – near the headquarters of both NATO and the EU – were part of a wave of attacks claimed by the Islamic State group in Europe.
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