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Suspect Arrested in Jewish Museum Killings in Belgium Suspect Arrested in Jewish Museum Killings in Belgium
(35 minutes later)
PARIS — A man suspected of the fatal shootings at the Jewish Museum in Brussels last month has been arrested in southern France, French and Belgian officials said on Sunday. PARIS — The French authorities announced Sunday that they had arrested a man in the killing of three people last month at the Jewish Museum in Brussels, identifying the suspect as a 29-year-old Frenchman with a long criminal history who had traveled to Syria last year to join with radical Islamist fighters there.
The man, identified in news media reports as Mehdi Nemmouche, 29, is believed to have traveled to Syria last year, perhaps to join with radical Islamist fighters there. Mr. Nemmouche, a former resident of Tourcoing, an impoverished industrial city in northeastern France along the Belgium border, was taken into custody on Friday after he got off a bus in Marseille that had come from Amsterdam by way of Brussels, police officials said. The authorities said that they apprehended the man, identified as Mehdi Nemmouche, during a routine customs check on Friday as he arrived by bus in Marseille from Brussels. They said he was carrying an assault rifle and revolver matching descriptions of those used in the deadly shootings on May 24 at the museum in Brussels.
President François Hollande of France said on Sunday that the suspect had been stopped “as soon as he set foot in France.” Referring several times to French “jihadists” who have left for Syria, Mr. Hollande praised the “effectiveness of our police forces” in preventing violence when such people returned to France. French and Belgian officials said there was evidence linking Mr. Nemmouche to the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or I.S.I.S., a jihadist group operating in Syria that until earlier this year maintained ties to Al Qaeda.
Media reports, however, indicated that Mr. Nemmouche might have been stopped during a routine customs check, not as a result of intelligence information. According to those reports, he was carrying a Kalashnikov assault rifle, a handgun, ammunition, a baseball cap and a small video recording device. Those items match descriptions of the gunman in Brussels, whose calm, deliberate attack at the museum was partly captured by video monitors. European officials said that the killings appear to be the first committed in Europe by a European citizen returning from the battlefields of Syria, a brand of violence that European officials have feared and warned against for months.
The motive for the shootings, on May 24, remained unclear. Killed were an Israeli couple who were tourists and a Frenchwoman who worked at the museum. A Belgian man was also shot and remained hospitalized in critical condition. But it was not clear what help, if any, Mr. Nemmouche might have received from I.S.I.S. or any other group in allegedly planning and carrying out the attack in Belgium, or whether his motivation was linked to his time in Syria.
Mr. Nemmouche reportedly spent at least two years in prison for his involvement in the armed robbery of a small supermarket in his home city in 2009. He is believed to have left for Syria in 2013, shortly after his release from prison, and to have returned to Europe in March, the French newspaper Le Monde reported. Officials in France were quick to stress the link. President François Hollande immediately praised the “effectiveness of our police forces” in preventing violence from the “jihadists” who have returned to France from Syria, saying the suspect in the Brussels killings had been stopped “as soon as he set foot in France.”
French officials say more than 700 French citizens, most of them young Arab men from the drab housing projects that ring many major French cities, have left to fight in Syria. Several have been arrested after they returned and charged under French antiterrorism laws. But the case may yet raise questions about the ability of law enforcement and intelligence services to track potential suspects traveling to and from Syria. Mr. Nemmouche, who was found carrying a hat and shirt similar to one seen in the museum surveillance video of the shooting and a video taking credit for the attack, had been identified by the authorities as a potential jihadist at the completion of his last prison sentence in late 2012, but was not placed under surveillance before departing for Syria shortly after his release.
The museum attack was being compared to that of a self-proclaimed member of Al Qaeda, Mohammed Merah, who held French and Algerian citizenship and was raised in a poor neighborhood outside Toulouse in France. Mr. Merah spent time in prison and was thought to have then traveled to Pakistan and Afghanistan for combat training with Islamist fighters. In March 2012, having returned to France, he killed three French soldiers, all of them Arabs, explaining later that he had targeted them because they served in Afghanistan. A short time later, he killed a rabbi and three Jewish children outside a day school. Video cameras at the museum show a lone gunman pulling a Kalashnikov-type assault rifle from a bag on May 24, firing it and then leaving on foot. Four people there were shot, three of whom died.
But his arrest is likely to intensify fears in Europe that European citizens returning from the battlefields of Syria may bring violence with them.
As many as 3,000 Europeans, including more than 700 French, are thought to have fought or to be fighting in Syria, most of them with the jihadist groups opposed to the government of Bashar al-Assad. France, with Europe’s largest Muslim population and a deep pool of anger and resentment among the country’s poor black and Arab youth, has already arrested dozens of men upon their return from Syria, charging some under the country’s antiterror laws and warning people thinking of traveling to Syria to join the conflict that their activities will be closely followed by the intelligence services.
Mr. Nemmouche was born in Roubaix, an impoverished industrial city in northeastern France near the border with Belgium.
He had been convicted seven times, on several occasions for driving without a license but also for violent robbery, and began a series of imprisonments in 2001, according to François Molins, the state prosecutor in Paris. Mr. Nemmouche appeared to have become radicalized during his time in prison; during his final stay, a five-year sentence, “he distinguished himself by his extremist proselytism,” Mr. Molins told reporters on Sunday, and fell in with other “radicalized Islamists.”
Prison administrators “signaled” Mr. Nemmouche to the French intelligence services upon his release from prison, on Dec. 4, 2012, Mr. Molins said. Within about three weeks, however, Mr. Nemmouche had left France, bound for Brussels, London, Beirut, Istanbul and, ultimately, Syria, Mr. Molins said. French intelligence services believe it was there that he joined I.S.I.S.
But they were unable to track him within Syria, Mr. Molins said. French intelligence learned on March 18 of his departure from Syria, when German officials informed the French that he had arrived at Frankfurt Airport. After leaving Syria earlier this year, Mr. Nemmouche made what Mr. Molins described as an apparent effort to “cover his tracks,” traveling to Istanbul, Malaysia, Singapore and Hong Kong, before returning to Europe via Frankfurt.
In the afternoon of May 24, a Saturday, a man dressed in a blue shirt and dark baseball cap, with two black bags draped over his right shoulder, strode into the Jewish Museum in Brussels. He killed Emanuel and Mira Riva, Israeli tourists, with shots from a .38-caliber revolver, Mr. Molins said. The man then extracted what the authorities described as a folding-stock Kalashnikov assault rifle and fired again, killing a French woman who worked as a volunteer at the museum and critically wounding a Belgian man.
Weapons, including an assault rifle with a loaded magazine and a round in the chamber, and clothing matching the descriptions of those of the killer were discovered in Mr. Nemmouche’s possession in southern France on Friday when he arrived in Marseille on an overnight bus, investigators said.
Investigators also found a GoPro video recorder and a piece of white fabric inscribed, in Arabic, with the insignia of I.S.I.S. and the words “God is great,” according to Mr. Molins.
Those items, along with the two firearms, appear in a 40-second video found on a digital camera in Mr. Nemmouche’s possession. In that recording, a man who does not appear but whose “voice seems to be that of Mehdi Nemmouche,” the prosecutor said, explains that he has made the video to show that he was responsible for the killings, as the GoPro had malfunctioned during the attack.
Mr. Nemmouche has been transferred to the headquarters of France’s domestic intelligence agency outside Paris, officials said. He has not been formally charged, and Belgian prosecutors have requested his extradition. He has remained largely silent since his arrest, according to Mr. Molins, the prosecutor.
The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria has made no public statement confirming or denying that Mr. Nemmouche was a member. Members of other Syrian rebel groups expressed frustration with ISIS and questioned the motives of foreign jihadists in Syria.
“I never heard of this jihadi in Brussels,” said Maher al-Hamoud, a commander in the Syrian province of Hama for the Western-backed Free Syrian Army. “But people like these are delaying the victory in Syria.”
A former lawyer for Mr. Nemmouche, Soulifa Badaoui, said that he had been moved “from foster home to foster home” as a child, and became homeless at age 17.
“He was not a young man anchored in crime,” Ms. Badaoui told the French television station BFMTV. “He was a young man with difficulties of a personal sort,” she said, but also “endearing,” “respectful” and “sharp-minded.”
If Mr. Nemmouche is found guilty of the killings in Brussels, the case could recall the killings carried out in March 2012 in southern France by Mohammed Merah, a self-proclaimed member of Al Qaeda. Mr. Merah, a French-Algerian dual citizen raised in a poor neighborhood outside Toulouse, spent time in prison and was believed to have traveled to Pakistan and Afghanistan for combat training with Islamist fighters.
He killed three French soldiers and, later, a rabbi and three Jewish children outside a Jewish day school.