'Surprise and astonishment' as Brussels shuts down to hunt its 'nest of jihadists'
Europe's secretive intelligence agencies and Belgium's lack of national vision criticized
Brussels has always had an ability to shutter itself. To quickly draw down the rolling iron grates that would protect living room windows from the view of outsiders on the street and to retreat inwards.
Being outward-looking was never its strong point despite the myriad of European and international institutions that made their homes there.
When I lived in Brussels covering the fledgling European Union in the 1990s, I often would walk home to the sound of those shutters closing one after the other with great clangs, leaving behind quiet, depopulated streets.
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But that was nothing compared to the empty feel this past week in the midst of a lockdown imposed by a government warning of a potential terrorist threat on the scale of those witnessed in Paris on Nov. 13.
In one part of town an escalator was left running at a metro station even though the whole system was shut for four full days. It added to the sensation that the city's inhabitants had disappeared with a great poof just seconds before, with the kettle still on.
As far as moods go, the great Belgian surrealist Rene Magritte would have had a field day. Troops bearing arms quickly replaced umbrella-wielding tour groups on the streets.
Now part of the metro has reopened, and Belgian authorities have reduced the threat level in Brussels from its highest level of four to three.
"I look at what's happening now with surprise and astonishment," columnist Beatrice Delvaux of Le Soir newspaper told me.
"Because I can't understand why a country such as Belgium has to shut down life in Brussels, in order to catch a thief that you don't catch. So it's very impressive and at the same time such a sign of weakness. Responsibility taken and weakness. It's a very rare combination."
In the current climate, journalists at Le Soir are no longer entering the newspaper's premises using the front door. Memories of what happened to their colleagues gunned down by Islamist militants at the French magazine Charlie Hebdo last January are still fresh.
"I think it has been a wake-up call for the Belgians to realize just what a hotbed of jihadism they have in the suburbs of Brussels," John Sawers, the former head of Britain's MI6 intelligence service, said this week.
Molenbeek is one of those inner city neighbourhoods on the edge of gentrification as the Belgian fashion industry inches ever closer to the mom-and-pop immigrants' shops and cheap clothing stores.
In the meantime its profile remains generally poor, unemployed and immigrant based. Many of the residents are of Moroccan descent, the children and grandchildren of guest workers who first came to Belgium in the 1960s.
Salah Abdeslam, the suspected Paris attacker and the subject of a major manhunt, lived just across the square from the Molenbeek town hall and police station with his brother Brahim, who died after he detonated his suicide belt in the attacks.
The community has tried to fight back against the negative image, posting Molenbeek signs on storefronts and fences with a peace sign. But there's also a real fatigue, with journalists on the jihadist trail arriving and asking questions.
The one woman who did agree to speak with us on a street selling shoes and shisha pipes shared Abdeslam's last name and said she was being hounded by journalists phoning and ringing her doorbell, assuming she was related to the man on the run.