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Terror alert shuts Brussels metro network

All metro train stations in Brussels will be closed on Saturday, the city’s public transport network said after Belgium raised the capital’s terror alert to the highest level, warning of an “imminent threat”.

“On the recommendation of the crisis centre of the Federal Interior Public Service, all our metro and light railway stations … will stay closed today,” Brussels transport operator STIB said on its website.

“This is a precautionary measure.

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“Buses will be running but some trams will be affected by this measure,” added the network, which said a decision would be taken “in consultation with relevant authorities and the police, day by day, whether to reopen the stations”.

As Europe tightens security a week on from the jihadist attacks in Paris that left 130 people dead, Belgium’s OCAM national crisis centre raised its alert level to four early on Saturday, “signifying a very serious threat for the Brussels region”.

The alert remains at level three for the rest of the country.

The centre urged citizens to avoid crowded areas such as concerts and transport hubs in Belgium’s capital, which is home to the European Union and NATO headquarters, and recommended that authorities in the Brussels region “consider cancelling major events” including scrapping first and second division soccer matches this weekend.

The security alert came hours after a suspect arrested in Belgium was charged with terrorist offences in connection with the Paris attacks.

The suspect, who has not been identified, is the third to be charged in Belgium over the deadliest terror attacks in French history after Hamza Attou and Mohammed Amri were charged this week with aiding fugitive suspect Salah Abdeslam on the night of the attacks.

Brussels resident Abdeslam, whose brother Brahim blew himself up at a Paris bar, is believed to be in Belgium and is the subject of a huge manhunt.

The fugitive is closely linked with the alleged Paris attack ringleader Abdelhamid Abaaoud, who was killed in a police raid in the French capital on Wednesday.

Both grew up in the poor Molenbeek district of Brussels, described as an extremist hotbed, before going to join the Islamic State group in Syria.

 

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