Technical Issue Prevented the Explosion of Abdel Salam's Suicide Belt in Paris Attacks

Abdel Salam  via Asharq Al-Awsat AR.
Abdel Salam via Asharq Al-Awsat AR.
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Technical Issue Prevented the Explosion of Abdel Salam's Suicide Belt in Paris Attacks

Abdel Salam  via Asharq Al-Awsat AR.
Abdel Salam via Asharq Al-Awsat AR.

Few days before Salah Abdel Salam stands trial before the Belgian judiciary in Brussels on the 5th of February, a technical report on the bloody attacks that hit Paris in November 2015 revealed that the explosive belt that he was wearing had a technical fault and did not explode.

Abdel Salam is the only attacker who survived.

Abdel Salam was arrested after a shootout in the Brussels district of Molenbeek in March 2016. Few days following his arrest, attacks at an airport and metro station in Brussels took place killing at least 32 and injuring around 300 people.

An explanation for what happened was that Abdel Salam, the only survivor of the group who carried out the terrorist attacks, the most violent in the history of France, retreated from detonating his explosive belt at the last minute, unlike the other suicide bombers who were killed in the attacks, including his older brother Ibrahim.

Investigators noticed shortly after the attack that the suicide belt lacked the battery and the compressor button. The report confirmed that a wire inside the belt as well as a piece of the bomber were both damaged and thus disabled the belt.

This was also confirmed by witnesses who testified that Abdel Salam had revealed to friends and to the person who hosted him in Brussels that the belt was not working.

Abdeslam is a Belgium-born French national of Moroccan descent.



Greece Blocks Asylum Claims for Migrants on Crete after Surge in Arrivals

Migrants get off a bus at the port of Heraklion, Crete, Greece, 08 July 2025. EPA/NIKOS CHALKIADAKIS
Migrants get off a bus at the port of Heraklion, Crete, Greece, 08 July 2025. EPA/NIKOS CHALKIADAKIS
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Greece Blocks Asylum Claims for Migrants on Crete after Surge in Arrivals

Migrants get off a bus at the port of Heraklion, Crete, Greece, 08 July 2025. EPA/NIKOS CHALKIADAKIS
Migrants get off a bus at the port of Heraklion, Crete, Greece, 08 July 2025. EPA/NIKOS CHALKIADAKIS

Greece's government said Wednesday it is temporarily suspending asylum applications for migrants arriving on the island of Crete, following a spike in arrivals from Libya.

More than 2,000 migrants have landed on the island since the weekend, according to coast guard figures, bringing the total number of arrivals this year to over 10,000.

Speaking in parliament, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said the government also planned to build a detention site on Crete for migrants and was seeking direct collaboration between the Libya and Greek coast guards to turn back boats leaving the North African country.

“This emergency situation clearly demands emergency measures,” Mitsotakis told parliament Wednesday. “The Greek government has decided to inform the European Commission that ... it will suspend the processing of asylum applications — for an initial period of three months — for those arriving by sea from North Africa.”

According to The Associated Press, the suspension will apply only to migrants reaching Crete by sea. Migrants entering illegally will be detained, Mitsotakis said. “The Greek government is sending a firm message: the route to Greece is closing, and that message is directed at all human traffickers,” he said.

Overnight, a fishing trawler carrying 520 migrants from Libya was intercepted south of Crete. A bulk carrier that took all of the migrants onboard was rerouted to the port of Lavrio, near Athens, so that the migrants could be detained on a mainland facility, authorities said.