
THE HAGUE (AFP) -
A
Dutch minister Wednesday backpedalled on his claim that the FBI had
notified the Netherlands about US concerns over two Belgian suicide
bombers before the Brussels attacks, admitting there had been "an
error".
Under-fire Dutch Justice Minister Ard van der Steur said
Wednesday: "I understand that an error was made about who sent the
information."
The Dutch police liaison officer in the embassy in
Washington had in fact "received the information from another large
American intelligence service -- namely the Intelligence Division of the
New York Police Department (NYPD)," the minister said.
The tipoff
was passed along "without the source, and it was accepted in the
Netherlands that the information had come from the FBI."
Van der
Steur had told the Dutch parliament on Tuesday that the FBI had notified
the Netherlands of its concerns over suicide bombers Ibrahim El
Bakraoui and his brother Khalid six days before the March 22 Brussels
attacks.
Dutch police had received an FBI report sent March 16 "in
which there was notification of Ibrahim El Bakraoui and his brother
Khalid's criminal backgrounds and Khalid's terrorist background," he
said Tuesday.
The following day "the issue came up during
bilateral contact between the Dutch and Belgian police," said Van der
Steur. "The radical background of both the brothers was discussed."
But his comments were immediately queried by Dutch MPs who asked why the FBI would inform the Netherlands and not Belgium.
The
minister, who has been criticised for what has been seen here as some
intelligence blunders, said he would ask the NYPD why it had not
informed Belgium of its concerns.
Ibrahim El Bakraoui was one of
two bombers who blew themselves up at Brussels airport on March 22. His
brother Khalid blew himself up at Maalbeek metro station. A total of 32
people were killed in the attacks.
Belgium's federal police said
it had not received any information direct from the FBI on March 16
about the Bakraoui brothers, and also said the two men were not raised
in the meeting with the Dutch police.
Under pressure at home and
abroad over an apparent series of missed clues about criminals linked to
jihadist networks, the Belgian government has however admitted mistakes
were made.
In the most glaring such example, Turkey accused
Belgium last week of ignoring a clear and present danger by revealing it
had deported Ibrahim El Bakraoui as a "terrorist" suspect last year,
after arresting him near the Syrian border.
The Dutch justice
minister last week confirmed that Turkey sent Bakraoui back to the
Netherlands in July, but stressed he had not been known to Dutch law
enforcement nor was he on any watch lists.
© 2016 AFP
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