(Reuters) - Two
of the three people killed in a shooting at the Jewish Museum in central
Brussels on Saturday were Israeli tourists, Israel's Foreign Ministry
said on Sunday. A spokesman for the
Israeli Foreign Ministry did not give further details on their
identities on the victims killed in the shooting, which Belgian
officials said may have been an anti-Semitic motivated attack. Israeli media said the two were a man and a woman, tourists from Tel Aviv. A
spokeswoman for Brussels prosecutors office said there was no clear
information about the perpetrator, although a fire brigade official said
earlier that the shooter had driven up to the museum, gone inside and
fired shots. "Regarding the motive, we have little information. Everything is possible," Ine Van Wymersch told a news conference. "We
know that the location, the Jewish Museum in Brussels, makes one think
of it being an anti-Semitic attack, but we do not have enough to confirm
this is the case." Belgium's
interior minister, Joëlle Milquet, was quoted by the RTBF Belgian
television station, saying: "It's a shooting ... at the Jewish Museum
... All of this can lead to suspicions of an act of anti-Semitism." No
details were given on the identity of the third person killed or on the
fourth victim, who was wounded and in life-threatening condition. They
had been shot in the face and neck, Van Wymersch said. Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in a statement from his office,
strongly condemned the killings. They were, he said, "the result of
endless incitement against the Jews and their state." Security
around all Jewish institutions in the country has been raised to the
highest level, and Prime Minister Elio Di Rupo met with police and
senior officials to discuss the situation. About half of Belgium's 42,000-strong Jewish community lives in Brussels.
Two Israelis killed in Saturday Brussels shooting
Reuters
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