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Belgium Arrests 14 in Terrorist Plot

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[December 21, 2007]  BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- Belgian police Friday arrested 14 Muslim extremists suspected of planning to free an al-Qaida sympathizer imprisoned for planning a terrorist attack on U.S. air base personnel, officials said. [Caption: Nizar Trabelsi is seen in this July 1992 file photo in Wuppertal, Germany, when he played with the German soccer club Wuppertaler Sport Verein.  Fourteen people were arrested in Belgium on Friday after authorities foiled a plot to free Trabelsi, a suspected al-Qaeda member, who was arrested in September 2001, officials say.  (AP Photo/ Horstmueller)]

Security was heightened at airports, subway stations and other public places across the capital, and the U.S. Embassy warned Americans of "a heightened risk of terrorist attack in Brussels" although it had no indication of any American targets.

Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt said the government had information suggesting "preparation of an attack."

"Other acts of violence are not to be excluded," he said.

The prisoner, Nizar Trabelsi, a 37-year-old Tunisian who played soccer for several German teams, was sentenced to the maximum 10 years in prison four years ago. He had admitted planning to drive a car bomb into the canteen at Kleine Brogel, a Belgian air base where about 100 American military personnel are stationed.

The base is home to Belgian F-16 warplanes equipped with nuclear weapons that are under U.S. control, according GlobalSecurity.org, a U.S.-based military affairs think tank.

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Trabelsi, who testified that he intended kill U.S. soldiers, says he met Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan and asked to become a suicide bomber. He was arrested in Brussels on Sept. 13, 2001. Police later discovered the raw materials for a huge bomb in the back of a Brussels restaurant.

The federal prosecutor's office said the 14 were planning to free the terrorist by force. "Trabelsi would be helped by a group of people, driven by an extremist vision of Islam," the prosecutor's office said.

The Interior Ministry called on citizens to be vigilant through Christmas. "You can point out possible suspect objects and actions to the local police," it said.

The U.S. Embassy urged U.S. citizens living or traveling in Belgium to maintain a high level of vigilance, especially in crowded places. But it had "no information to indicate that U.S. citizens or facilities are an intended target."

[Associated Press; By RAF CASERT]

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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