Brussels Police Raid Neighbourhood: Blasts Heard And Suspects Shot And Detained

Shocking pictures showed a suspect being dragged along a tram platform.
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Belgian prosecutors say more people have been detained in counter-terrorism raids in Brussels prompted by the arrest of a Frenchman in the Paris area suspected of plotting a new attack.

The federal prosecutor's office says three people were arrested on Friday in three different districts of the Belgian capital - Schaerbeek, Forest and Saint-Gilles - according to the Associated Press.

Two of the people detained were shot in the leg, the federal prosecutor's office said.

According to Belgian media, blasts were also heard during the raids.

Shocking pictures from the scene in Schaerbeek showed a suspect being shot and dragged along a tram platform by police...

Handout . / Reuters
Belgian police drag a suspect along a tramway platform, in this still image taken from amateur video, after the suspect was shot, in the Brussels borough of Schaerbeek, following Tuesday's bombings in Brussels, Belgium,
Handout . / Reuters
Handout . / Reuters
Belgian police take up position behind a car, in this still image taken from amateur video, to apprehend a suspect on a tramway platform in the Brussels borough of Schaerbeek.
Francois Lenoir / Reuters
Broken glass from a tramway stop shelter is seen after shots were fired during a police search in the Brussels borough of Schaerbeek.
Handout . / Reuters
A suspect lies on the platform of a tramway station, in this image taken from amateur video, after he was shot and wounded by police.
Handout . / Reuters

The Mirror reported that the man had a young girl of around seven with him, who was escorted away by police.

A bomb disposal robot was also seen investigating a backpack carried by the man.

The man was one of three people arrested today in Brussels and six in raids in the city overnight, according to Sky News. 

Three terrorists died in the attacks in Brussels on Tuesday and a massive manhunt was launched to track down other suspects believed to be behind the blasts.

 

Meanwhile, officers in France swooped on a man suspected of being in the "advanced stages" of a plot to attack the country, in a raid on the outskirts of Paris.

France's interior minister, Bernard Cazeneuve, said there were no links "at this stage" between the plot and the terror attacks in Brussels and in Paris in November.

More than 30 people died and hundreds were left injured after Tuesday's attacks on Brussels' airport and metro system.

Briton David Dixon was today confirmed as among those killed in the bombings.

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Police use a robotic device as they take part in a search in the Brussels borough of Schaerbeek following Tuesday's bombings in Brussels, Belgium, March 25, 2016
REUTERS/Christian Hartmann