1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Brussels attack: 2 charged in connection with terror group

October 24, 2023

Two men living in Paris have been arrested on suspicion of having connections to the gunman who killed two Swedish football fans in Brussels.

Police cordon off the area and take security measures around the King Baudouin Stadium in Brussels after a gunman killed two Swedish nationals on October 17
Two Swedish nationals were shot dead in the attack and a third one was woundedImage: Dursun Aydemir/Anadolu/picture alliance

French anti-terrorism prosecutors said Tuesday two men believed to have links with the gunman who carried out last week's deadly attack on Swedish football fans in Brussels have been charged in Paris.

The two, believed to be from Tunisia, face charges of forming a terrorist criminal group and having complicity in murder linked to a terrorist plot.

Investigators say they were still establishing the exact relationship between the two Paris suspects and the Tunisian gunman who killed two people and wounded another.

They were among four people arrested last week as part of the investigation into the Brussels attack.

Suspected shooter killed by police

Abdesalam L. is said to have shot dead two Swedish soccer fans and wounded a third before a Belgium-Sweden international football match in Brussels last week.

A day later, the suspected gunman was fatally shot in a police operation.

One of the Paris suspects knew the 45-year-old Tunisian man, but his lawyer, Souleymen Rakrouki, denied that he had any involvement with the incident in Brussels.

The attacker "is a friend he has known for a long time; he had not seen any sign of radicalization. He could have never imagined such an act," Rakrouki told French news agency AFP. 

Brussels attack fallout

Before he was shot, the suspected Brussels shooter identified himself as a member of the Islamic State.

Belgian Justice Minister Vincent Van Quickenborne announced his resignation on Friday after revealing that authorities failed to deport the suspect.

Brussels shootings spark debate over deportation policy

02:46

This browser does not support the video element.

Van Quickenborne told a press conference that Tunisia had sought his extradition in August last year, but Belgian authorities did not act.

The shooter had already spent time in prison in Sweden, and his asylum claim was rejected by Belgian authorities in 2020.

lo/ab (AFP, EFE)

Skip next section DW's Top Story

DW's Top Story

Skip next section More stories from DW