BSS
  21 Mar 2022, 11:17

Belgium mourns after car kills six in carnival crash

LA LOUVIERE, Belgium, March 21, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Belgium mourned on Sunday
after a car ploughed into a crowd of early morning carnival-goers, killing
six people and injuring dozens of others, but the authorities ruled out an
act of terrorism.

  The tragedy took place around 5:00 am (0400 GMT) as the carnival of Strepy-
Bracquegnies, a district in the former coal-mining town of La Louviere, was
getting under way.

  "At this stage of the investigation, we know that a vehicle slammed into a
group (of carnival goers) and that there are six dead and 26 injured,
including 10 people whose life is in danger," prosecutor Damien Verheyen told
reporters at the town's city hall.

  Investigators said the suspects were born in 1988 and 1990 and came from La
Louviere, a town near the French border in Belgium's rust belt. They were not
known to the authorities for similar acts.

  Chief prosecutor Christian Henry said the two were coming from a nightclub
"and had just dropped off another person just before the events".

  Blood test results were expected on Monday and "will allow us to say if
they have consumed drugs", he told RTBF news.

  "Nothing goes in the direction of radicalism or extremism," he said.

  "The facts have been qualified as murder but we will see what the
investigation will reveal and if we should requalify the thing as
manslaughter," he added.

  - From 'Folklore to horror' -

  Belgian towns and villages host many street carnivals around the season of
Lent, with the parades in Binche and Aalst the best known internationally.

  Like Binche, the carnival of Strepy-Bracquegnies involves participants
dressed up as "Gilles", extravagantly attired comical figures who are "called
out" to the parade in the early hours.

  La Louviere mayor Jacques Gobert said there were 150 to 200 people
participating in the carnival's pre-dawn prologue, including the "Gilles" in
their garb.

  When they reached a road, "a car coming from behind at high speed literally
pulverised a large number of people," he told journalists.

  Witnesses described a horrific scene of a car that drove into a group of
carnival-goers that included children.

  Fabrice Collignon, a Belgian TV presenter, told AFP the procession was
under way when in a "snap of the fingers we went from fun and folklore to
absolute horror."

  The car seemed to "deliberately crashed into the crowd", said Collignon.

  Another witness, Theo, told RTBF news he saw a car that moved "very fast
and didn't brake".

   - 'Day of mourning' -

  Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo and other ministers rushed to the
scene along with Belgium's King Philippe, who met first responders in the
Strepy-Bracquegnies sports hall, where the morning's carnival procession
began.

  "It should have been a day of celebration after a difficult time. It turned
into a day of mourning," De Croo told reporters, noting that the carnival was
the first after two years of cancellations because of the coronavirus
pandemic.

  The RIAAL La Louviere football team said that one of the victims was a
steward at the club and that a match scheduled later on Sunday had been
cancelled.

  "Words fail us," the team wrote on its Facebook page.

  In neighbouring France, President Emmanuel Macron "assured the Belgian
prime minister of his support and friendship after this tragedy", his office
said.

  In February 2020, a man rammed his car through a carnival procession in
Germany, injuring dozens of bystanders including children.

  Germany and other countries at the time had been on high alert for car
ramming attacks since December 2016, when an Islamic State group sympathiser
ploughed a truck through a Christmas market leaving 12 dead.

  German towns have seen several such attacks since, with most carried out by
people who were found to have psychological issues.