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This Article is From Apr 07, 2016

Brussels Attacks A 'Failure' But Belgium Not A 'Failed State', Says PM

Brussels Attacks A 'Failure' But Belgium Not A 'Failed State', Says PM
"It took 10 years to stop Bin Laden," PM Michel countered, referring to former Al Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden. (Reuters)
Brussels, Belgium: The ISIS attacks in Brussels represented a security "failure", Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel admitted on Wednesday, but he rejected the notion his country was a "failed state".

Belgian authorities have faced strong criticism at home and abroad for not doing more to prevent the March 22 carnage after clear links emerged between the Brussels attackers and the terrorists behind the Paris terror assaults in November.

"When there is an attack like that of course that's a failure and nobody can deny this," Michel told reporters in Brussels.

But "I cannot accept the idea that we're a failed state."

A total of 32 people died in the suicide blasts at Brussels airport and a metro station, Belgium's worst ever terror attacks.

The bloodshed came four days after the sole surviving suspect in the Paris attacks, Salah Abdeslam, was arrested in Brussels, just around the corner from his family home, after four months on the run as Europe's most wanted man.

"It took 10 years to stop Bin Laden," Michel countered, referring to former Al Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden.

Abdeslam is currently awaiting extradition from Belgium to France and has denied any prior knowledge of the Brussels bombings.

Belgium, a notoriously complex country divided along linguistic and political lines, has been accused of a lax security apparatus and of failing to keep better track of suspected home-grown extremists.

In the most damning revelation since the attacks, Turkey said Belgium ignored warnings from Ankara after it deported airport suicide bomber Ibrahim El Bakraoui as a "terrorist fighter" last year following his arrest near the Syrian border.

Two minister offered to step down over the Turkey accusation, but Michel refused their resignations.

"We're a small country at the heart of Europe... a hub from where one can easily organise attacks in other European countries," Michel said, pleading for better cross-border intelligence cooperation.

"That's where we have a lot of work to do," he said, calling for a "European FBI or CIA".

Cleaning Job

Also on Wednesday, the European Parliament said one of the Brussels bombers briefly worked as a cleaner at the institution several years ago.

"He held a summer holiday job cleaning at the Parliament for one month in 2009 and one month in 2010," it said in a statement.

It did not name the individual, but a source close to the inquiry told AFP it was Najim Laachraoui, who set off a suicide bomb at Brussels airport along with Bakraoui.

Laachraoui is also suspected of being the bomb-maker for the Paris terror assaults last November after his DNA was found on some the explosives used in the attacks, which killed 130.

The European Parliament said the suspect did not have a criminal record when he worked for the cleaning firm it had contracted at the time.

Belgian police are still hunting for a mystery third suspect in the Brussels attacks, dubbed "the man in the hat", who was seen in CCTV footage next to the two airport bombers.

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