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French police release 3 suspects, extend questioning of 9 arrested after attacks

Policemen stand guard at Colline street in Verviers, eastern Belgium, on January 16, 2015, after police shot dead two suspects in a gun battle after they opened fire on officers with heavy weapons, and arrested a third man. Belgium was on high alert after two suspected jihadists were killed in a police raid, while German and French police made fresh arrests to put Europe on edge a week after the Islamist attacks in Paris. JOHN THYS/AFP/Getty Images

PARIS – French police have released three women arrested along with nine others Friday in an anti-terror sweep connected to the attacks in Paris by Islamic extremists that killed 17 people and put Europe on high alert.

Paris prosecutor spokesman Denis Fauriat said the other nine suspects will have their interrogations prolonged by 48 hours, a step allowed under France’s tough anti-terror laws.

Police in France, Germany and Belgium have arrested dozens of suspects in recent days as part of the anti-terror sweep sparked by last week’s bloody spree in and around Paris, in which brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi and their friend Amedy Coulibaly killed 17 people at the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, a kosher grocery, and elsewhere.

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Fallout from the attacks has spread around the world. Demonstrations in support of the murdered Charlie Hebdo journalists have been held in countries from the United States to Brazil, and violent protests against the magazine’s depictions of the Prophet Muhammad have taken place in Niger, Pakistan and Algeria.

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French, German, Belgian and Irish police rounded up dozens of suspects earlier this week as anxiety spread across Europe and authorities rushed to thwart further attacks.

Belgian police launched a vast anti-terrorism sweep in and around Brussels and the eastern industrial city of Verviers Thursday, which left two suspects dead. Police say the suspects were within hours of implementing a plan to kill police.

On Saturday, soldiers fanned out to guard possible terror targets in Belgium while police in Greece detained at least two suspects as part of the widening counterterrorism dragnet across the continent.

Authorities say there was no apparent link between the foiled plots in Belgium and the terror attacks in Paris.

President Francois Hollande said France was “waging war” on terrorism and it showed on the streets of Paris and elsewhere, where 122,000 police and well-armed troops have been deployed to protect the country.

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