World

Belgium: Three charged with terror offences

Police guard a check point and man positions during a police raid in the suburb of Schaerbeek in Brussels. Belgium's prime minister refused to accept the resignations of his justice and interior ministers Thursday despite increasing evidence of intelligence and law enforcement failures to prevent this week's suicide bombings by Islamic militants PICTURE: Alastair Grant/AP
Police guard a check point and man positions during a police raid in the suburb of Schaerbeek in Brussels. Belgium's prime minister refused to accept the resignations of his justice and interior ministers Thursday despite increasing evidence of intelligen Police guard a check point and man positions during a police raid in the suburb of Schaerbeek in Brussels. Belgium's prime minister refused to accept the resignations of his justice and interior ministers Thursday despite increasing evidence of intelligence and law enforcement failures to prevent this week's suicide bombings by Islamic militants PICTURE: Alastair Grant/AP

Three people have been held on charges of participating in terrorist group activities, Belgian prosecutors said.

They were among four people detained during searches in Brussels and the northern cities of Mechelen and Duffel on Sunday.

Belgian prosecutors did not release details on the alleged terrorist actions or whether they were linked to the March 22 suicide bombings at Brussels airport and the Metro.

The fourth person has been released without charge, according to a statement from the Belgian Federal Prosecutor's Office.

Those charged by the investigating magistrate were identified only as Yassine A., Mohamed B. and Aboubaker O.

The charges came as Brussels Airport was due to test its capacity to partially resume passenger service. But an airport official said it was still too early to say when the airport might reopen.

Florence Muls, the airport's external communications manager, said 800 staff members on Tuesday will test temporary infrastructure and new arrangements designed for passenger check-in. The Belgian government must approve the new system, he said, before Brussels Airport can resume handling passenger traffic.

Two suicide bombers on March 22 damaged the airport's departure hall, and along with another suicide bomber who blew himself up on a Brussels Metro train, killed at least 34 people and injured another 270.