Police release men arrested in Molenbeek raid
January 15, 2017
On Sunday, police released three men captured in much-publicized raids in the Brussels district of Molenbeek after determining that there was nothing to charge them with. Late Saturday, prosecutors said police had fruitlessly searched several houses in relation to an anti-terror investigation.
"The searches were carried out as part of an investigation by Brussels prosecutors," spokeswoman Ine Van Wymersch said on Saturday. "While nothing was found, three people were taken in for questioning."
No details have emerged since the men's release. What is known is that the raids took place late evening, with armed police reportedly setting up a security perimeter during the operation after carrying out house searches related to an anti-terrorism investigation. The area was closed off to traffic as special police forces with machine guns moved in, the news agency Reuters reported.
Molenbeek was home to some of the men who killed 130 people in multiple attacks in Paris over the course of an evening in November 2015, as well as the suicide bombers whose detonations at the Brussels airport and a metro station last March killed 32 people. Investigators say the same cell carried out both attacks, and prosecutors have charged about 20 people in Belgium in connection with the killings in Paris. Police have raided several residences in the district since, but have often failed to produce evidence or contraband - as appears to have again been the case on Sunday.
mkg/rc (Reuters, AFP)