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Belgium to boosts security services in crackdown on extremists

A military police soldier patrols the Brussels Midi train station on November 18, 2015 in Brussels. Belgium's national security level has been raised to three, following a series of coordinated attacks by Islamic State jihadists in Paris on November 13 that killed at least 129 people, including 3 Belgians, in scenes of carnage at a concert hall, restaurants and the national stadium, and connections following the attack between the terrorists and to Molenbeek, in west Brussels.
A military police soldier patrols the Brussels Midi train station on November 18, 2015 in Brussels. Belgium's national security level has been raised to three, following a series of coordinated attacks by Islamic State jihadists in Paris on November 13 that killed at least 129 people, including 3 Belgians, in scenes of carnage at a concert hall, restaurants and the national stadium, and connections following the attack between the terrorists and to Molenbeek, in west Brussels. DIRK WAEM/AFP/Getty Images

BRUSSELS – Belgium’s prime minister on Thursday called for changes to the country’s constitution to combat extremists, and promised hundreds of millions of euros to boost the security forces.

Addressing the federal parliament as security forces were conducting raids around the capital Brussels, Charles Michel pledged to use changes to the constitution to extend preventive detention times for suspects from 24 hours to 72 hours.

He also affirmed that Belgium would move forward alone on a system of airline passenger information sharing that European Union nations have been incapable of agreeing in four years.

“The risk before us is the collapse of the entire European project if we don’t take our responsibilities,” he told the lawmakers.

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READ MORE: Extremists may strike next with chemical, biological weapons: French PM

“All democratic forces have to work together to strengthen our security,” he said.

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Michel said 400 million euros ($427 million) would be earmarked to boost the security forces, and said special attention would be paid to eradicating messages of hate inspiring young people to fight in places like Syria and Iraq, or back at home later in Europe.

“For jihadis who return, their place is in prison,” said Michel.

READ MORE: How it happened: a timeline of the Paris massacre

He dismissed criticism of Belgian police, saying they had provided vital information that led to a major police raid in the northern Paris suburb of Saint Denis on Wednesday.

Some 500 people are on Belgium’s list of “radicalized” people, and about 30 people are known to have travelled to Syria as potential foreign fighters in the Molenbeek neighbourhood, a major source of extremists.

Michel said he would introduce a system for people considered a threat that would “impose the wearing of an electronic bracelet.”

Raf Casert in Brussels contributed.

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