Key suspect in Paris strike held
Man had eluded authorities since November attack that killed 130
Salah Abdeslam, a 26-year-old French national who grew up in Brussels, was captured in a raid that sent loud bursts of gunfire reverberating through the city's Molenbeek neighborhood.
“We got him,” tweeted Theo Francken, Belgium's secretary of state for asylum and migration.
Abdeslam was injured in the leg during the raid and police were preparing to question him late Friday, hopeful that he will reveal crucial information about a Europe-wide network of Islamic extremists.
Abdeslam was not armed but did not immediately obey orders when confronted by police, Belgian prosecutor Eric Van der Sypt said.
Images from French TV showed a man with a seemingly injured leg, wearing a hooded top, being bundled into a police car.
Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel said three suspects were arrested. The prime minister believed they were all armed and had to be neutralized by authorities.
“This was a very important result in the battle for democracy,” he said.
Earlier in the day, Michel had been at a summit between the European Union and Turkey, where an agreement on the migrant crisis had just been reached. He was seen hurrying out of the building on his phone as soon as he was informed about the incident.
Michel said President Barack Obama had also personally telephoned to congratulate the security forces and urge him not to give up the fight against violence and terrorism.
At a news conference, French President Francois Hollande struck a somber tone, saying that while the arrests marked an “important moment,” this was not the end of the fight against terrorism.
“Until we have arrested all those who took part or contributed, financed the terrorist network that committed the abominable act on Nov. 13, our fight will not be over,” he said.
The French president said more people were involved in the attacks than initially thought, and he predicted more arrests would follow.
Hollande said the prosecutor was likely to seek Abdeslam's swift extradition to France.
Abdeslam had been the subject of a massive international manhunt since three suicide bombers killed scores inside a theater, cafes and at the national stadium.
Abdeslam is believed to have played a central role in organizing the attacks and may have been the driver for the gunmen who blew themselves up at the Stade de France.
He was a childhood friend of the suspected ringleader, Abdelhamid Abaaoud; and his brother, Brahim, was among the attackers who blew themselves up.
Authorities believe Abdeslam fled Paris by car several hours after the attacks after phoning two friends asking them to drive from Brussels to pick him up. It later emerged that he passed through multiple police checkpoints but was not stopped.
Nearly every other attacker either blew themselves up or was killed by police. Why Abdeslam did not meet the same fate has been the source of some debate.
Abdeslam was found Friday back in the neighborhood he knew best: the one where he lived before the Paris terrorist strikes.
The fact that Abdeslam eluded capture for so many months was a huge source of embarrassment and frustration to intelligence services, and authorities were heavily criticized for failing to prevent the attacks and find all the culprits.
Police started to home in on Abdeslam earlier in the week.
Michel said 58 people were arrested during a raid in the Brussels neighborhood of Forest on Tuesday. Belgian police found fingerprints and DNA belonging to Abdeslam in an apartment, prosecutors said.
Police were met with gunfire and an Algerian national, identified as Mohamed Belkaid, was killed during the operation. Four police officers were also wounded. Belkaid is believed to have been a key member of the team behind the Paris attacks and was using the name Samir Bouzid.
Two men reportedly escaped from the building during Tuesday's raid, one of whom might have been Abdeslam.