Brussels reopens schools, metro
Brussels struggled to return to normal yesterday after four days on maximum terror alert, with schools and the metro reopening despite two suspects from the Paris attacks still being at large.
But the Belgian capital remains on the highest alert, with hundreds of armed police and soldiers on patrol.
Authorities fear the possibility of Paris-style attacks, as several of the attackers were based in Brussels.
France says 130 people died in a series of attacks in Paris. At least one suspected attacker is still at large.
The so-called Islamic State (IS) group says it carried out the gun and bomb attacks on 13 November. Five people in Belgium have been charged with terrorism offences in connection with the attacks.
In Brussels, schools reopened on Wednesday and public transport began running again from 06:00 (GMT) though some metro lines remained closed.
However, the city is expected to remain on its current top level of alert until at least next Monday.
Belgian Foreign Minister Didier Reynders said the authorities were looking for about 10 suspects who might have been involved in planning attacks, possibly on shopping centres.
Meanwhile, it has emerged that Abdelhamid Abaaoud, the suspected ringleader who was killed in police raids in the Parisian suburb of Saint Denis, was near the Bataclan theatre during a deadly siege there.
French officials say Abaaoud was in a vehicle that dropped attackers off at a cafe and restaurants that were also targeted on the night of 13 November.
Prosecutors say there is evidence that Abaaoud was planning a later attack on the La Defense business district.
On Tuesday, an arrest warrant was issued in Belgium for a man named Mohamed Abrini over the attacks.
Prosecutors say that two days before the attacks, he was seen driving a car with suspect Salah Abdeslam at a petrol station on the motorway to Paris.
Abrini is described as "dangerous and probably armed". Abdeslam is currently the subject of an international manhunt after the attacks.
French President Francois Hollande is due to meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Wednesday, as part of a diplomatic push to address the threat from IS.
On Tuesday, Hollande met US President Barack Obama in Washington, while on Thursday he is scheduled to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Obama said there would be increased co-operation with France to hit IS targets in Iraq and Syria. He also called on the EU to implement an agreement that would require airlines to share passenger information in order to track suspected militants.
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