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European Jews fear for safety a year after museum attack

Published: 20 May 2015 - 12:53 pm | Last Updated: 13 Jan 2022 - 11:55 pm

 


Brussels---A year after a gunman murdered four people at the Jewish Museum in Brussels, Jews across Europe increasingly fear for their safety and warn they are on the frontline of an Islamist war against democracy itself.
Since the attack in the Belgian capital on May 24, 2014, Jews have been slain in jihadist attacks in Paris and Copenhagen. Jews were also murdered in a similar attack in the French city of Toulouse in 2012.
"The threat of jihadist attacks in Europe is not limited to the Jewish community," European Jewish Congress chief Moshe Kantor told AFP.
"Islamist extremists see European democracy and freedom as their primary enemy. However, Jews remain on the frontlines," he added.
Like EU and European government officials, Kantor voiced concern that Islamist militants trained in weapons use and hardened in battle would mount more attacks in Europe following their return from Middle East war zones.
Several thousand European nationals are feared to have joined jihadist groups in Syria and Iraq.
The four people killed in the Brussels attack were Israeli couple Emanuel and Miriam Riva, French volunteer Dominique Sabrier and museum receptionist Alexandre Sterns.
Six days after the Brussels attack, police in the southern French port city of Marseille arrested 29-year-old Frenchman Mehdi Nemmouche, who had gone to fight with jihadists in Syria.
Found with weapons similar to those seen on museum security cameras, Nemmouche was extradited to Belgium at the end of July.
While waiting for his trial, for which no date has been set, he has denied having carried out the attack.
- 'Difficult year' -
"We have had a difficult year on the personal level," said Philippe Blondin, the director of the small museum in the picturesque Sablon neighborhood of Brussels.
The time when the museum was open without security measures "has unfortunately ended," Blondin told AFP.
Visitors now walk past two well-armed Belgian soldiers and then through airport-like metal detectors to enter the building.
The museum, which reopened four months after the shooting, will exceptionally be closed on Sunday, May 24, in a sign of mourning.
But the Coordination Committee of Belgium Jewish Organisations will stage a vigil outside its doors at 3 pm (1300 GMT).
"The day of the attack, I was devastated, but I couldn't part from the feeling that it was going to happen," said Joel Rubinfeld, the president of the Belgian League Against Anti-Semitism who rushed to the scene within 30 minutes.
 

AFP