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BRUSSELS -- As the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the deadly attacks at the Brussels airport and one of the city's metro stations, police in Belgium issued a ...
Watch: Aftermath of Brussels airport blasts 00:40. Some witnesses told Sky News the blasts struck near the American Airlines desk in the departures hall.
Bombings at Brussels airport and a metro station in the city on Tuesday 22 March killed 32 people from around the world. Many more were injured in the attacks.
Belgian prosecutors release new footage of the key surviving Brussels airport attack suspect, ... He passes in front of the Sheraton hotel and leaves the airport near the Avis vehicle rental car park.
Shortly after the airport explosion in Brussels, a blast was also heard at Maalbeek Metro station. Local media is reporting that at least 13 people have been killed and 35 have been severely injured.
BRUSSELS — The Islamic State claimed responsibility for brutal attacks that brought blood and chaos to this capital city's airport and downtown metro station Tuesday, killing dozens of people ...
— Avis de recherche (@police_temoin) March 22, 2016. ... Update, 8:28 a.m.: Initial reports that 13 people were killed at the Brussels airport have since been revised down to 11.
Ibrahim El Bakraoui, 29, was seen in the centre of a CCTV image wheeling his suitcase packed with deadly explosives through the departures hall of Brussels Airport in the minutes before the attack.
The 20-year-old from the coastal Belgian town of Knokke was at the Brussels airport on Tuesday planning to fly to London for his job as an animator.
The assaults brought Brussels to a virtual standstill. The subway and the airport were closed — the latter will remain so on Wednesday — and Belgian leaders warned residents to stay indoors.