No terror link in Belgium’s Ghent siege
Neighbours said the occupants of the apartment were 'drug traffickers'
Brussels: Three suspects in an armed hostage-taking incident in the Belgian city of Ghent surrendered to police on Monday, reports said, as officials said there were no indications of terrorism.
Police had earlier surrounded an apartment after four armed men took a captive in a working-class area of the northwestern city. The three suspects were “taken outside, with their hands in the air” by special armed police, Flemish-speaking VRT public television reported, while the fate of the fourth man was unclear and the situation was continuing.
Neighbours said the occupants of the apartment were “drug traffickers”, but Belgian authorities would only confirm that they suspected it was an isolated incident with no terror links.
“There is no indication that this is linked to terrorism, the Islamic State or what is happening at the moment in Sydney,” the Ghent prosecutor’s office said. The Belgian siege happened at the same time as a lone gunman kept terrified staff and customers captive in a cafe in Australia’s largest city, brandishing an Islamic flag.
Although, it was initially thought that the attack had terror links, later on all such claims were suspended.