In this hand out file photo distributed by the Belgian Federal Police, a surveillance camera shows a man shooting at the Jewish museum in Brussels, Belgium, on Saturday, May 24, 2014.
Paris:
A man has been arrested in southeast France in the investigation of a shooting at a Jewish museum in Brussels that left at least three people dead, the Paris prosecutor's office said on Sunday.
An official with the prosecutor's office says the suspect has been handed to anti-terrorist investigators and could be held at least through Tuesday under French counterterrorism law. She says the man was arrested on Friday during a customs inspection at a train and bus station in the port city of Marseille.
The man was found to have a revolver and an automatic weapon of the same type used in the Brussels shootings on May 24. The official said ballistics analyses are under way to determine if it is the same weapon.
The man had arrived in Marseille on a bus from Amsterdam that had stopped in Brussels, she said. She would not provide further information and was not authorised to be publicly named when speaking of ongoing investigations.
The Paris prosecutor was expected to give a news conference on Sunday on the matter.
The killings, which came on the eve of European parliament elections in which far right parties had a strong showing, led Belgian officials to raise anti-terror measures.
Video of the attack showed an athletic man with cap walking determinedly into the small Jewish Museum. The whole assault took a minute at most.
An official with the prosecutor's office says the suspect has been handed to anti-terrorist investigators and could be held at least through Tuesday under French counterterrorism law. She says the man was arrested on Friday during a customs inspection at a train and bus station in the port city of Marseille.
The man was found to have a revolver and an automatic weapon of the same type used in the Brussels shootings on May 24. The official said ballistics analyses are under way to determine if it is the same weapon.
The man had arrived in Marseille on a bus from Amsterdam that had stopped in Brussels, she said. She would not provide further information and was not authorised to be publicly named when speaking of ongoing investigations.
The Paris prosecutor was expected to give a news conference on Sunday on the matter.
The killings, which came on the eve of European parliament elections in which far right parties had a strong showing, led Belgian officials to raise anti-terror measures.
Video of the attack showed an athletic man with cap walking determinedly into the small Jewish Museum. The whole assault took a minute at most.