Washington Institute warns against possible attacks in Belgium
 
 
Three renowned terrorism experts warned recently against potential terrorist attacks in Belgium, against the background of the attacks that had already taken place in France.
The experts, who spoke
during a virtual seminar host by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy,
delved in detail into the conditions of jihadist groups in Europe. 
One of the experts
participating in the seminar, Lorence Bendinar, said terror
attacks in France just keep on coming. 
She added
that in late September, two people were seriously wounded in a knife attack by
a young Pakistani refugee outside the former office of the satirical
magazine Charlie Hebdo, which had just republished cartoon caricatures
of Muhammad. 
In 2015,
the initial publication of the images sparked an attack that outraged much of
the West—the massacre of 12 people at the magazine’s newsroom. In mid-October,
an 18-year-old Chechen Russian refugee who had grown up in France beheaded
Samuel Paty, a teacher, for having shown the cartoons in a civics class devoted
to free speech, she added. 
She noted
that Paty was slaughtered for “blasphemy” just outside his school in the Paris
suburb of Yvelines. 
The country
was still reeling from his brutal murder when, less than two weeks later, a
21-year-old Tunisian killed three people and injured many more at Notre Dame
Basilica in the southern city of Nice, she said. 
She added
that the assailant, who had been in the country less than a month, slit the
church sacristan’s throat, cut a woman’s neck so deeply that the police
described it as an attempt to decapitate her, and stabbed a third victim
multiple times; she died after staggering out of the neo-Gothic church. 
Only four
years earlier in that same city, another Tunisian had driven a truck into
crowds celebrating Bastille Day on July 14, killing 86 people, she said.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


