Liege shooting: Two police officers and civilian dead in Belgium
A man has
shot dead two female police officers and a civilian in the eastern Belgian city
of Liège.
The gunman
also took a female cleaner hostage at a school before being killed by police.
Four other police officers were also injured.
The man's
motive is not yet clear but the incident is being treated as terrorism.
Police
sources quoted in local media said the man was heard shouting "Allahu
Akbar" ("God is greatest" in Arabic).
Belgian
broadcaster RTBF said the gunman was let out from prison on temporary release
on Monday where he had been serving time on drug offences. It said that he may
have been radicalised while in jail.
Liège mayor
Willy Demeyer confirmed the deaths of the two female officers during a press
conference and said that "physical and psychological support" would
be provided to the families of the victims.
Mr Demeyer
added that "all flags on municipal buildings" were to be flown at
half-mast, a book of condolences would be placed in the local town hall and a
service would be held at 13:00 local time (11:00 GMT) on Wednesday to honour
the victims.
What
happened?
The shooting
unfolded late morning on Tuesday near a cafe in the city centre.
Prosecutors
said the man followed and "savagely" attacked the officers from
behind with a knife before taking a gun from them and opening fire.
He also shot
dead a 22-year-old man who was sitting in the passenger seat of a parked car as
he walked in the direction of a nearby school, where he briefly took a member
of staff hostage.
"The
young man who was killed in the vehicle was a pupil of the high school in
Liège, he was going to qualify as a primary school teacher in the next few
weeks," Mr Demeyer said.
Armed police
officers with shields, helmets and bulletproof vests then arrived at the scene
and "intervened".
The attacker
began firing at the officers in an attempt to escape. Two officers were shot in
the leg, leaving one officer in a serious condition.
Two other
officers received injuries to their arms before the attacker was shot dead,
prosecutors said.
Footage on
social media showed people running to safety as several gunshots rang out.
Children at the school were moved to safety.
Liège city
authorities later tweeted: "The children in the local schools are
safe."
Belgium's
Prime Minister Charles Michel said he was following the situation closely and
expressed his support for those caught up in the shooting.
Violence lâche
et aveugle a #Liège. Tout notre soutien pour les victimes et leurs proches.
Nous suivons la situation avec les services de sécurité et le centre de crise.
— Charles Michel (@CharlesMichel) May
29, 2018
Belgium's
Interior Minister Jan Jambon said that investigators were trying to establish
"exactly what happened", adding: "Our thoughts are with the
victims of this horrible act."
What's the
wider situation?
Belgium
remains on alert after a series of jihadist attacks in the country and in
neighbouring France.
A
Brussels-based cell was involved in the 2015 Paris attacks which left 130
people dead in several locations.
Brussels
itself saw three suicide bombings in March 2016, with 32 people killed. Both
the Paris and Brussels attacks were claimed by the Islamic State-group.
Later in
2016 a man attacked two police officers with machetes while shouting
"Allahu Akbar" before being shot dead.
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