Brussels peace march canceled due to security fears

Organizers canceled a peace march planned for Sunday in the Belgian capital because of security fears following last week’s terror attacks.

With Brussels still on edge after Tuesday’s bombings, authorities requested that the rally be postponed, organizer Sophie Barthélemi said.

The rally was set to mark the terror attacks that killed 28 people from various nations.

Belgian authorities said Saturday that the widely reported death toll of 31 included the three suicide attackers, putting the victims’ tally at 28.

Fourteen bodies were recovered at the Brussels Airport and 14 others at the Maelbeek metro station, officials said.

Suspect charged

Authorities continued the complex task of unraveling the plot behind Tuesday’s horrific bombings, announcing they had charged one suspect with “terrorist murder.”

Belgium’s Federal Prosecutor’s Office identified the suspect only as “Faycal C,” but authorities didn’t specify what role the person had in the bombings at the airport and a subway station.

In addition to terrorist murder, Faycal C. faces charges of “participation in terrorist activities” and “attempted terrorist murder,” officials said.

No weapons or explosives were found in the person’s home, which was raided by Belgian authorities Thursday, the office said. Further details about Faycal C. were not immediately available.

Arrests have also taken place in other European countries. On Saturday, an Algerian national was taken into custody outside the southern Italian city of Salerno on suspicion of being part of a network producing fake residency documents linked to the Brussels attacks, the Italian National Police said.

The Algerian man was wanted in Belgium for his alleged involvement in clandestine immigration linked to the Paris attacks, police said via Twitter.

More victims identified

Authorities said 24 of the 28 deceased victims have been positively identified: 13 were Belgians, and 11 were foreigners from eight nationalities. More than 300 people were injured.

The death toll also includes Americans Justin and Stephanie Shults, according to Stephanie’s mother, Carolyn Moore.

“They are in heaven,” Moore said.

Searching for suspects

Residents of Brussels were trying, against the odds, to return to some sense of normalcy in the wake of the attacks.

But the task was complicated by the continuing official manhunt, complete with raids, gunfire, explosions and live news conferences.

Authorities are searching for a third man seen in surveillance video with two suicide bombers at the airport shortly before the attacks began. He’s wearing a hat and light-colored clothing, walking alongside ISIS bomb-maker Najim Laachraoui and Ibrahim El Bakraoui as they rolled luggage carts. This individual allegedly planted a bomb and left, investigators believe. That bomb didn’t go off immediately, though it did detonate later — by which time authorities were on site and no one was killed or injured.

Also being sought is a man who is seen in surveillance footage holding a large bag at a Brussels metro station before a blast ripped through a train car near the station, according to Belgian public broadcaster RTBF. Ibrahim El Bakraoui’s brother, Khalid, was confirmed killed in that explosion, and it’s possible the unidentified man also died.

Police work to prevent another attack

Officials said Saturday that another man, arrested Friday at a subway station in the Schaerbeek district of Brussels, had not been charged. But a judge has allowed him to be held for another 24 hours, pending investigation.

And a person identified only as “Aboubakar A.” has been arrested and charged with participation in activities of a terrorist group, officials said. They did not say when or where he was arrested.

Can Europe stop the next attack?

Investigators know of additional plots in Europe, in various stages of planning, linked to the same networks behind the November attacks in Paris and the latest ones in Brussels, according to U.S. counterterrorism officials. Those terrorists are tied to ISIS, the Islamist extremist group that has taken over swaths of Syria and Iraq while staging attacks elsewhere around the world.

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