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Ceremonies held to mark anniversary of Brussels terror attacks

King Philippe and Queen Mathilde laid wreaths and met survivors of the suicide bomb attacks on the city's airport and metro.

King Philippe lays a wreath at the Maelbeek metro station in Brussels
Image: King Philippe lays a wreath at the Maelbeek metro station in Brussels
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Ceremonies have taken place to mark the first anniversary of the suicide bomb attacks in Brussels that killed 32 people.

King Philippe and Queen Mathilde led sombre ceremonies at Brussels airport in Zavantem and the Maelbeek metro station, held at the exact times the .

Families of victims and survivors of the attacks were among crowds at the ceremonies, and a new steel memorial to those killed was unveiled near the European Union headquarters.

Trams and buses ground to a halt across the Belgian capital and commuters and public transport workers applauded during a "minute of noise".

Soldiers during the ceremony at the Brussels airport in Zaventem
Image: Soldiers during the ceremony at the Brussels airport in Zaventem

More than 300 people were wounded in the attacks, claimed by Islamic State, where suicide bombers detonated explosives in the departure hall at the airport and on a packed rush hour train.

At the airport, King Philippe laid a wreath outside the departure hall. The names of the 16 people killed in the attack there were read out and a minute's silence was held.

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Eddy Van Calster, whose wife Fabienne Van Steenkiste was among those killed at the airport, performed a song of reflection as the royal family looked on.

Passengers observe a minute's silence on the Brussels metro
Image: Passengers observe a minute's silence on the Brussels metro

Prime Minister Charles Michel, who faced claims that Belgium was a "failed state" for not preventing the terror cells from carrying out the attacks, said the country remained strong.

He tweeted: "Today we remember the victims of the attacks. We all remain united."

At the metro station, King Philippe laid a second wreath in front of a wall covered in messages to those who were killed.

At the final ceremony, leaders including EU Council President Donald Tusk attended the opening of a new memorial to the victims - comprising two pieces of curved steel punctured with holes to look like shrapnel.

Queen Mathilde and King Philippe at the ceremony at Brussels airport
Image: Queen Mathilde and King Philippe at the ceremony at Brussels airport

On Wednesday afternoon, three marches will converge at the Place de La Bourse, which was filled with flowers as a memorial to the victims after the attacks last year.

One of the city's most famous landmarks - the Manneken Pis statue of a little boy - will be dressed in a fireman's outfit to pay tribute to the work of the emergency services in the wake of the attacks.

Belgium has remained on its second-highest alert level since the bombings - meaning the threat of an attack is possible and likely, but not immediate.

Soldiers continue to guard key buildings and transport links and carry out random patrols in public areas.

The attacks started at the airport, where Ibrahim El Bakraoui and Najim Laachraoui detonated suicide bombs hidden inside suitcases as people queued to check in.

Ibrahim's brother Khalid set off his device just over an hour later at Maelbeek station.

Mohamed Abrini, whose device failed to go off at the airport, was arrested in Brussels nearly a month later.

Sarah Esmael Fazal, whose sister Sabrina Fazal was killed in the attacks, delivers an emotional speech
Image: Sarah Esmael Fazal, whose sister Sabrina Fazal was killed in the attacks, delivers an emotional speech

Investigators have said the attacks were carried out by the same network that was behind the November 2015 Paris attacks, in which 130 people were killed.

The arrest of Paris attacker Salah Abdeslam in a police raid in Molenbeek four days before the Brussels attacks is said to have panicked the rest of the cell into targeting the airport and metro, according to investigators.