At least one suspect is still at large after an anti-terror raid by Belgian and French police officers investigating November’s Paris attacks was met with heavy-weapon gunfire that left four police officers wounded.

An official said that another suspect was found dead when police stormed a Brussels apartment at the centre of the raid, where suspects had opened fire on police.

A joint French and Belgian anti-terrorism squad investigating the Paris attacks that killed 130 people had arrived to search an apartment building in the quiet neighbourhood of Forest in the south-west of Brussels at about 2.30pm.



The police came under gunfire from “heavy weapons”, according to the French interior minister, Bernard Cazeneuve. Three Belgian police officers were wounded in the initial shootout, with one in a serious condition after being hit in the ear and head according to Belgian media outlets. Another burst of gunfire reportedly took place around two hours later. Further gunfire was heard after 6pm. In total, four officers were wounded in the various shootouts.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest A police sniper takes position on a rooftop during the operation. Photograph: Laurent Dubrule/EPA

“Police were fired at,” Eric Van Der Sypt, a spokesman for the Belgian federal prosecutor, told AFP, adding that the search was “linked to the Paris attacks investigation”.

“Two individuals apparently barricaded themselves inside a home,” Forest mayor Marc-Jean Ghyssels told local media.

In the mid-afternoon, a police spokeswoman told French television that gunmen were at large.

Dozens of armed police in balaclavas armed with submachine guns cordoned off the scene. Security services blocked roads and told residents to stay indoors. Two primary schools and creches close to the scene of the shooting were in lockdown until the children could be safely collected by parents. Journalists were asked not to publish videos or photos that identified police officers.



Police cordoned off a wide area and trams were suspended. The incident took place across the street from an Audi auto factory and the train lines leading to the Gare du Midi railway station used by Eurostar trains to London and Thalys trains to Paris.

In the early evening, on one approach to the scene, four police and one van blocked off the street, while two helicopters buzzed overhead.

Prime minister Charles Michel announced a meeting of Belgium’s national security council would be held on Wednesday. He said the meeting would not take place on Tuesday night because police operations were still ongoing.

He confirmed that four police officers were injured after the suspects opened fire. “Without doubt, we have had a lot of luck, with four lightly injured, because it could have been a major event,” he said.

The Belgian prosecutor said the dead suspect was armed with a Kalashnikov assault rifle.

The police cordons raised memories among commentators of the five-days of lockdown imposed on Brussels two weeks after the Paris attacks, when authorities warned of an imminent threat of violence in the city during the ongoing manhunt for suspects.

But beyond the wide security cordon, people in the broader area of Forest attempted to get on with their lives. In early evening, about 50 people had gathered but life carried on as normal. In nearby streets, a couple sat in the laundrette and a woman walked her dog.



Locals were shocked to find the sleepy neighbourhood at the centre of a major police operation. “It’s always quiet here, it is peaceful, “ said Nathanael Dantas, a 21-year-old student, who said he was unable to return home. “I’ve never seen so many police here, against the blare of sirens. But police allowed one family with three small children to pass through the cordon and go home.

“It is a very calm peaceful area,” said one 17-year-old, standing in her parents’ shop. “This is a shock for everyone.” Outside, television cameras crowded around the police cordon.

“Forest is a calm, peaceful place. I’ve never heard of gunfire in this neighbourhood”, said Maria, 29, pushing a buggy, as she waited outside the police cordon, unable to visit her mother who lives inside. “Now I am afraid, I am afraid for my little girl.”

The November attacks in Paris are believed to have been in part prepared and coordinated in Brussels. Belgian security forces are still hunting suspects and associates of Brussels-based militants involved in the attack.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest A Belgium police officer on a rooftop near the scene where shots were fired in the suburb of Forest. Photograph: Yves Herman/Reuters

But police confirmed that the raid was not connected to Salah Abdeslam, the 26-year-old French national who grew up in Brussels and is one of the prime suspects.

Abdeslam, believed to have played a key role in organising the Paris attacks, has been on the run since November. He left Paris in the hours after the attacks, shortly after his brother had blown himself up as part of the terrorist assault. Abdeslam fled across the border to Belgium, helped by friends. He is believed to have stayed for a time in the country but has not yet been found.

“The operation was not targeting Salah Abdeslam. It was aimed at people connected to one or several of the 11 Belgians who have been charged,” a police source confirmed to AFP. Eight of the 11 people charged are still in detention.



Abdeslam’s associate Mohamed Abrini, who like him grew up in the Molenbeek area of Brussels, is also still at large.

Abdeslam was reportedly holed up in an apartment in the Schaerbeek district in north Brussels for three weeks after the Paris attacks. In January, Belgian authorities said they had found two apartments and a house used by Abdeslam and other suspects before the attacks.

A fingerprint belonging to Abdeslam was found in the apartment along with traces of explosives, possible suicide belts and a drawing of a person wearing a large belt.

Authorities also found DNA traces from Bilal Hadfi, another of the attackers who blew himself up with a bomb vest near the French national stadium.

The other premises identified were a flat in Charleroi – a town south of Brussels where a major airport is located – as well as a house in the rural village of Auvelais near the French border.







