In a report on Tuesday’s attacks at Brussels Airport and a subway station, the ICT quotes Fighel as saying that ‘’one may thus believe that Abdeslam did not talk in his initial interrogation after his arrest, and withheld information regarding the Brussels attacks.’’
According to an Israeli intelligence news website, the Belgian government some weeks ago hired an Israeli security firm to inspect security arrangements at Brussels Airport where two bomb attacks carried out by Islamist terrorists claimed the lives of more than 30 people and injured scores of victims.
‘’In terms of airport security, the Europeans are 40 years behind Israel,'''' deplores , Pini Schiff, a former aviation security supreme officer at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion airport and currently CEO of Israel’s association of security companies, after the terrorist attacks at Brussels Airport claimed by the Islamic State.
According to a Channel 2 report, Israel warned Belgium several weeks ago about inadequate security measures at Brussels’ Zaventem Airport where two deadly bomb attacks took place on Tuesday.
Footage has emerged on social media of a Muslim woman tearing up an Israeli flag at a memorial for the victims of the Brussels terror attack where mourners have placed flowers, candles and flags to show their sadness and solidarity.
The issue arose after a Conservative MP asked the prime minister whether he agreed that anti-Semetism was a problem that should be forcefully eliminated from both private and public organizations.
The Jewish Crisis Management Team of Antwerp urged the community to comply with these rules and declared the next three days to be days of mourning with celebrations and public feasting forbidden.
“We are shocked and we are sad, but we are determined to fight this scourge until it is defeated,” World Jewish Congress President Ronald S. Lauder said in reaction to the terrorist attacks in the Belgian capital Brussels which killed 31 people and wounded 270 at the airport and in a metro station.
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday night called his Belgian counterpart Charles Michel to offer his country’s assistance to combat terror following bombings at Brussels airport and a metro station in the Belgian capital which killed 35 people and left more than 200 wounded.