Belgian police storm apartment to end Ghent siege

State prosecution service say there is no immediate link to terrorism

Belgian police cordoned off part of the city after four men were seen entering a building in the Dampoort district. Photograph: Francois Lenoir/Reuters

Belgian armed police stormed an apartment in the western city of Ghent on Monday to end a siege after reports that gunmen had taken a hostage there.

The victim was safe and well and three other men had been detained, a spokeswoman for state prosecutors said.

“Three men have been taken away though there were no weapons found. The earlier reports were of four men with kalashnikovs,“ she said. “...It‘s not entirely clear whether someone was in fact taken hostage.“

Armed police in balaclavas emerged at about 1pm from the cordoned-off building in the Dampoort district.

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“It‘s over,“ one police officer said.

Belgian broadcaster VRT cited neighbours as saying that the flat had been used by drug dealers.

The incident occurred within hours of Australian police locking down the centre of Sydney after an armed man walked into a downtown cafe, took hostages and forced them to display an Islamic flag.

The Belgian prosecution spokeswoman said there was no indication of a link in the Ghent case to terrorism.

“It‘s really nothing along the lines of what is happening in Sydney,“ she said.

By mid-morning a large police operation had been set up in the working-class neighbourhood to keep bystanders away from the scene.

Media reported that two months ago there was a hostage incident in Ghent linked to extortion.

Agencies