Perilous
Times
5 dead, 122 hurt in Belgium hand grenade attack
LIEGE, Belgium (AP) – Summoned for questioning by Belgian police,
a man with a history of weapons and drug offenses left home armed
with hand grenades, a revolver and an assault rifle. Stopping at a
central square filled with holiday shoppers, he lobbed three
grenades into the crowd, then opened fire.
Ambulances and police on the Saint-Lambert square in Liege,
Belgium, after a man threw multiple grenades.
Four people were killed, including an 18-month-old toddler, and
122 were wounded in the assault Tuesday that brought tragedy to
the pre-Christmas season of students reveling in exam results and
preschoolers enchanted by brightly lit trees and holiday stalls.
Authorities said the shooter also died, but they were at a loss to
explain the reason for the onslaught. The prime minister said it
was not related to terrorism.
In a second burst of deadly violence in Western Europe on Tuesday
— attacks rare for the continent — a man shot and killed two
Senegalese vendors at a market in Italy.
The midday attack in the eastern Belgian city of Liege sent
hundreds of panicked shoppers stampeding down the cobbled streets
of the old city, fleeing explosions and bullets.
Belgian authorities identified the shooter as Nordine Amrani, a
33-year-old Liege resident who had done jail time for offenses
involving guns and drugs, and had been called in for questioning
Tuesday in a sexual abuse case.
Officials said Amrani left his home with a backpack, armed with
hand grenades, a revolver and an FAL assault rifle. He walked
alone to the busy Place Saint-Lambert, the central entry point to
downtown shopping streets, then climbed onto an overpass that gave
him an ideal view of the square, which was bedecked with a huge
Christmas tree and crowded with shoppers.
From there, Amrani lobbed three hand grenades toward a central bus
stop, which serves 1,800 buses a day, and opened fire. The
explosions sent shards of glass from the bus shelter across a wide
area.
"I heard a loud boom," said Dimitri Degryse, who was driving near
the square. "I thought it was something on my car that was broken
or something. Then a few seconds after a second boom, and I saw
all the glass breaking, I saw people running, screaming."
Hundreds fled the square as well as a nearby Christmas market.
Video showed people, including a large group of preschoolers,
rushing to seek cover, some still carrying shopping bags.
Amrani died at the scene, but Liege Prosecutor Danielle Reynders
told reporters he was not killed by police. It was unclear if he
committed suicide or died by accident, though he still had a
number of grenades with him.
Those killed were two boys ages 15 and 17, a 75-year-old woman,
and an 18-month-old toddler who died Tuesday evening in the
hospital, Liege police said.
As police hunted for possible accomplices, residents were ordered
to stay in their homes or seek shelter in shops or public
buildings. Sirens blared and a police chopper roared overhead, and
a medical post was set up in the nearby courtyard of the Prince
Bishops courthouse. Dozens of emergency vehicles took victims away
for treatment.
Police closed off the area but found no accomplices, and calm
returned a few hours later.
The Place Saint-Lambert and the nearby Place du Marche host
Liege's annual Christmas market, which features 200 shops and
attracts some 1.5 million visitors a year. A nearby Ferris wheel
is also a central attraction.
By dusk, with the Christmas lights gleaming again, King Albert II
and Queen Paola came to pay their respects, as did Prime Minister
Elio Di Rupo.
Di Rupo stressed the attack was the act of a lone assailant, a man
known to police who had no links to terrorism. "The whole country
shares in the pain. This is an isolated case. This is not about
terrorism," he said.
Herman Van Rompuy, a former Belgian prime minister who is now
president of the European Council, said he was badly shaken by the
attack.
"There is no explanation whatsoever," Van Rompuy said. "It leaves
me perplexed and shocked."
While such attacks are unusual in Western Europe, the continent
has not been immune to such violence.
There was another deadly shooting Tuesday in Italy, where a man
opened fire in an outdoor market in Florence, killing two vendors
from Senegal and wounding three other Senegalese before killing
himself, authorities said.
Investigators identified the attacker as 50-year-old Gianluca
Casseri, and RAI state TV said he was known to police for having
participated in racist marches by an extreme right-wing group.
In Norway last July, far-right extremist Anders Behring Breivik
went on a bomb and shooting spree that killed 77 people in Oslo
and an island retreat, apparently motivated by a hatred of Muslim
immigrants and a deep grudge against the governing Labor Party. A
psychiatric evaluation found him criminally insane, which if
upheld by the courts means he would end up in compulsory
psychiatric care instead of prison.
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AP correspondents Don Melvin, Gabriele Steinhauser and Robert
Wielaard in Brussels contributed to this report.