Police after newly identified Paris terror attacks suspect
French and Belgian police have launched a manhunt for a newly identified suspect linked to November's Paris terror attacks, as revelations about the depth of networks cultivated by a recently captured fugitive fuel concerns about potential future assaults.
Salah
Abdeslam, whose DNA was found on a suicide belt discarded on a Paris
street after the November 13 attacks, spent more than four months on the
run as Europe's most wanted man before he was arrested in a gunbattle in the Brussels suburb of Molenbeek on Friday.
Since
his capture, officials have said he was ready to carry out future
attacks and was supported by a wide network of associates, and they
warned of the possibility of a new wave of ISIS terrorists preparing to
carry out further attacks.
In a statement Monday, the Belgian
prosecutor's office appealed to the public for sightings of Najim
Laachraoui, 24, who has used the alias Soufiane Kayal and traveled with
Abdeslam to Budapest, Hungary, in September of last year, the statement
said.
Authorities had previously said that a man using the Kayal alias had been in contact via phone with Paris attacks ringleader Abdelhamid Abaaoud, apparently giving him directives in the lead-up to the November attacks, and that the name had been used to rent a villa in Auvelais, southern Belgium, which was used by the plotters.
Laachraoui's
DNA was found in the Auvelais villa and another house in the Schaerbeek
district of Brussels that the group used, the Belgian prosecutor's
office said Monday. Laachraoui had gone to Syria in February of 2013,
the statement said.
Authorities warned that Laachraoui was considered dangerous and should not be approached.
Police
are also searching for Mohammed Abrini, a previously identified
suspected accomplice of Abdeslam's who is believed to have driven him to
Paris to carry out the attacks, which were claimed by the Sunni terror
group ISIS.
Abdeslam has been charged
with participation in a terrorist murder and taking part in the
activities of a terrorist organization.
Paris
prosecutor Francois Molins has said Abdeslam, 26, had a key role in
planning the attacks, in which nine terrorists killed 130 people with
guns and bombs in Parisian restaurants, shops and a concert venue the
night of November 13.
At a press
conference in Brussels on Monday, Belgium's federal prosecutor Frederic
Van Leeuw said the investigation still had some way to go.
"We
have a certain number of pieces of the puzzle and some pieces have
found their place, but we're far from having completed the puzzle," he
said.
Lawyer: Abdeslam felt 'a form of relief' about capture
Abdeslam's
lawyer, Sven Mary, said in a radio interview Monday with Belgian state
broadcaster Radio 1 that he believed his client felt some relief about
being caught after months on the run.
"I think that there was a form of relief, in the sense that the hunt was over," said Mary.
The
lawyer, who met with his client Saturday, said he was cooperating with
authorities and would eventually be transferred to France.
"There's
not a single reason he wouldn't go to France. The only thing I wish for
is to confirm the legality of the arrest warrant -- I think that is my
job as lawyer. It is not a question of killing time not to go to
France."
Mary had told Belgian public
broadcaster RTBF on Sunday that he intended to file a complaint about
remarks made by Molins, the Paris prosecutor, in which he had publicly
disclosed, at a news conference, information gleaned by Belgian
authorities during his interrogation.
Molins
had told reporters that Abdeslam told investigators that he had planned
to blow himself up at the Stade de France, one of the targets of the
attacks, but simply backed down.
However,
the prosecutor said he was suspicious about that claim, reminding
reporters that in a communique issued by ISIS after the attacks, the
terror group mentioned the commissioning of an attack in the 18th
district of the French capital, where none took place.
Abdeslam was known to have driven to the 18th after dropping off suicide bombers at the Stade de France.
Mary continued his criticism of Molins on Monday, saying: "We don't have a single lesson to learn from France. Period."
Attackers' networks bigger than thought
Abdeslam's
ability to remain at large for more than four months since the attacks
and the apparent lack of information that authorities had on his
movements have fueled concerns about the extent of the networks
supporting the suspect.
Belgian
Interior Minister Jan Jambon admitted to press on Sunday that he was
surprised that Abdeslam had been apprehended in Brussels, as it had been
believed that he had left the country.
"We
don't know what he did for these four months. Did he stay in Brussels
the whole time, or did he travel around?" he said, adding that the
fugitive's support network was bigger than anticipated.
His
comments were echoed by Belgian Foreign Minister Didier Reynders, who
said Sunday that the investigation that led to Abdeslam's capture had
shown that more people were involved in the Paris attacks than
previously thought.
"After the terror
attacks in Paris, I said to one TV channel in the U.S. that we were
searching for around 10 people with heavy weapons. We have far more than
that since November, and not only in Belgium but also in France," he
said.
"For the moment we have found more than 30 people involved in the terrorist attacks in Paris, but we are sure there are others."
Abdeslam's arrest had resulted in authorities recovering a large number of heavy weapons, he said.
"He was ready to restart something in Brussels," Reynders said.
On
Monday, a spokeswoman for the attorney general in the southwestern
German city of Karlsruhe told CNN that Abdeslam had visited the town of
Ulm a month before the attacks. The city is known as a stronghold for Islamist, some of whom are fighting for ISIS in Syria.
Spokeswoman Frauke Kohler said she could release no further details while police investigate.
Other charges in Friday raid
Belgian
State Security Chief Jaak Raes told press Belgian affiliate on
Sunday that the threat posed to Europe by ISIS was far from over.
"We
know that a number of people are possibly on their way to Western
Europe, with the intention of conducting an attack -- to, with the
'jihad mentality,' do damage to Western democracy," he warned.
After
the raid that captured Abdeslam, police charged Monir Ahmed Alaaj, also
known as Amine Choukri, with the same crimes as Abdeslam. Alaaj was
also wounded in Friday's gunbattle. Three others were detained in the operation, one of whom was charged
with participating in a terror group's activities and hiding criminals,
and another with hiding criminals. The third was freed without being
charged.
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