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Brussels attackers 'planned to strike France': Prosecutors

Suspect Mohamed Abrini, alleged to be third man in CCTV image at Brussels airport, charged with committing 'terrorist murders'
A sign reads "Terrorism has no religion" as Muslim Community of Belgium members join a tribute to victims of the 22 March Brussels attacks on 9 April, 2016 (AFP)

The Brussels-based members of the Islamic State group behind attacks in Paris last November planned a fresh strike in France but targeted the Belgian capital instead as police closed in, the Belgian federal prosecutor has said.

The prosecutor on Sunday also announced that the so-called "man in the hat," Mohamed Abrini, had been charged with "terrorist murders" over the attacks in Brussels last month.

Suicide bombers claimed 32 lives when they blew themselves up at Brussels airport and at a metro station in the city on 22 March, but left a trail for police leading directly to the November Paris attacks, which killed 130 people.

"Numerous elements in the investigation have shown that the terrorist group initially had the intention to strike in France again," the Belgian federal prosecutor's office said in a statement.

"Surprised by the speed of the progress in the ongoing investigation, they urgently took the decision to strike in Brussels."

The prosecutor gave no further details, but the Brussels onslaught followed the 18 March arrest of top Paris attacks suspect Salah Abdeslam after four months on the run.

The prosecutor also gave no details of the planned attack in France, but late last month French police arrested Reda Kriket near Paris, finding weapons and explosives in a flat he had used to suggest he was planning an attack of "extreme violence".

Belgium has arrested two suspects, identified as Abderrahmane A and Rabah M, in connection with the Kriket case, and on Thursday both were remanded in custody along with three other suspects held in connection with the November Paris attacks.

Shortly after Kriket's arrest, French prosecutor Francois Molins had said that "while no specific target has been identified, nonetheless everything leads us to believe that the discovery of this cache [of weapons] has allowed us to prevent an action of extreme violence by a terrorist network".

In Sunday's statement, the Belgian prosecutor said Abrini, the man seen in CCTV footage with the two suicide bombers at Brussels airport, had been charged with "terrorist murders".

"The investigating judge specialised in terrorism cases has put Mohamed Abrini in detention in connection with the investigation into the Brussels and Zaventem [airport] attacks," the statement said.

"He is charged with participation in the activities of a terrorist group, terrorist murders and attempts to commit terrorist murders."

Authorities criticised

The Belgian authorities have faced intense criticism over their handling of the Brussels attacks and the investigation, especially as it has emerged that many of the suspects were previously known to the police.

Critics say the government has not done enough to prevent extremists targeting Muslim youth in areas such as Molenbeek area of Brussels, with Belgium proportionately the biggest source of foreign fighters going to join the Islamic State group in Syria.

Abdeslam, whose brother Brahim blew himself up in Paris, was seen driving to the French capital with Abrini shortly before the attacks, but he apparently balked at the same mission and fled back to Brussels.

Police finally arrested him not far from the family home in Molenbeek after apparently stumbling upon another jihadist safe-house in the Forest area of the city.

There has been much recrimination in Belgium about how he and the others were able to remain free for so long, with two ministers offering to resign.

Abdeslam is now awaiting extradition to France.

"That is justice ... he who does something must pay the price," Abdeslam's father, who has lived in Belgium for 40 years, told French radio broadcaster Europe 1 on Tuesday.

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