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How Europe’s No. 1 fugitive managed to elude capture for months

Click to play video: 'Paris attacks suspect Salah Abdeslam now in custody in Belgium'
Paris attacks suspect Salah Abdeslam now in custody in Belgium
WATCH ABOVE: Four months after 130 people were murdered in a series of co-ordinated terror attacks in Paris, Belgian police say they’ve captured one of the gunmen responsible, Salah Abdeslam. As Jeff Semple reports, Abdeslam was hiding right under their nose – Mar 18, 2016

BRUSSELS — As the net closed in around Salah Abdeslam, Europe’s No. 1 fugitive was holed up in an apartment in the place he knows best, a Brussels neighborhood favored by several of the Paris attackers.

Abdeslam’s four months on the run ended Friday when he was shot in the leg and dragged away in a white hoodie during a massive police operation in the Brussels neighborhood of Molenbeek.

READ MORE: Three Paris attacks suspects, including Salah Abdeslam, captured in Brussels raid

Authorities now need to piece together how the man who was at the Nov. 13 attacks that killed 130 people in Paris managed to evade authorities for so long. It appears, during the final stages at the very least, Abdeslam was hiding only 500 meters (yards) from his parents’ home, the place where he grew up.

On Molenbeek’s central square, a worker at a store selling Islamic headscarves and copies of the Quran said Saturday that Abdeslam’s strategy of hiding in his old neighborhood was all the residents could talk about.

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 “For four months, he basically disappeared into thin air. And now we learn he was right here.”

It remains unclear exactly where Abdeslam spent his days while on the run and how he evaded police for so long. Four other suspects were detained in Friday’s raid, including three members of a family that sheltered him.

On Saturday, Belgian authorities charged Abdeslam and an alleged accomplice with “participation in terrorist murder.” A third person detained Friday was charged with being in a terrorist group and hiding criminals, while two others who had been detained were released.

The Belgian government said it realizes that support for Abdeslam may have been more widespread than initially thought.

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“I always said that at the beginning we thought it was several individuals. Today we have to recognize that the number of people who support him is higher,” said Belgian Interior Minister Jan Jambon. “That doesn’t mean that the entire community supports him. But the support is a lot higher than I had estimated at the beginning.”

READ MORE: Salah Abdeslam, Paris attacks suspect, will fight extradition efforts

The 26-year-old is suspected of being the logistics man for the gang of Islamic extremists who went on a rampage in Paris on Nov. 13, killing 130 people. Abdeslam is thought to have rented rooms, shopped for detonators and driven at least one of the killers from Brussels to Paris.

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His lawyer, Sven Mary, told the Associated Press that Abdeslam “doesn’t deny he was in Paris.”

In Paris, prosecutor Francois Molins told reporters that, during an interrogation session on Saturday, Abdeslam told Belgian officials that he had “wanted to blow himself up at the Stade de France” on Nov. 13 but that he backed out at the last minute. Molins did not say what caused the 26-year-old to purportedly change his mind.

Possibly Abdeslam’s closest brush with police came in the immediate aftermath of the Nov. 13 attacks, when he and contacts from Brussels were stopped at a French police checkpoint but let through. Since then, he has been only seen on wanted posters.

It would not have been hard for him to disappear in Molenbeek’s densely populated warren of narrow, cobbled streets and crumbling apartment blocks, where people with a Moroccan background form the vast majority of the population.

WATCH: Arrest, explosion caught on camera in raid on Paris attacks suspect
Click to play video: 'Arrest, explosion caught on camera in raid on Paris attacks suspect'
Arrest, explosion caught on camera in raid on Paris attacks suspect

“Probably he had contacts with other men to help him,” Molenbeek Mayor Francoise Schepmans told The Associated Press. “But we have to wait. What’s important now is that Salah Abdeslam has been arrested.”

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Abdeslam is expected to be extradited to France after questioning in Belgium. But his lawyer, Sven Mary, told reporters Saturday that his client will fight extradition efforts, speaking after he and Abdeslam met with a Belgian investigating magistrate.

France quickly issued a new European arrest warrant with more charges to speed up his extradition to a June 18 deadline.

Meanwhile, Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel warned that “the fight is not over” and his government announced the nation’s terrorism alert level would remain unchanged at 3 on a 4-point scale.

READ MORE: France re-enacts deadly attack on Bataclan concert hall

After the hours-long police raid on Friday, life sought to recapture a semblance of normality in Molenbeek on Saturday.

A mother wearing a dark headscarf with a son in pink soccer cleats picked their way along the sidewalk past camera crews staked out in front of the house where Abdeslam was arrested. Its ground-floor windows were boarded up. A man in a nearby cafe drank coffee and read a French-language newspaper with the front-page headline: “Salah arrested. Mission accomplished.”

Some neighbors were clearly shaken at the fact that the young man with French nationality but close ties to Molenbeek had been living in their midst despite the huge police manhunt.

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“He was next to us, next to our kids. The most-wanted man was next to us day and night,” said Lamia, a 29-year-old mother of two young girls, who also declined to give her family name. She said she regularly visits her grandmother, who lives on a street near Abdeslam’s final bolt hole.

“When things blew up, it was shaking at our place. We were crying, the children were crying. Honestly, it’s a shock. He was two blocks away,” she said.

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