Brussels attacks: Get up to speed - CNN

Brussels attacks: Get up to speed on the latest developments

Story highlights

  • Protesters storm a memorial in Brussels and raise their arms in Nazi salutes
  • Arrests have been made in Belgium, France, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands
  • The official death toll in the attacks is now 35

(CNN)Authorities carried out more than a dozen raids. Security concerns forced the cancellation of a peace rally. And at a memorial for the attack victims, anti-immigrant tensions boiled over in the streets.

Here's a look at the developments over the weekend, days after coordinated attacks at the airport and a metro station in the Belgian capital killed at least 35 people and injured hundreds more:
    Tensions high: Protesters stormed into a memorial for Brussels attack victims Sunday, raising their arms in Nazi salutes and shouting anti-immigrant slogans as they scuffled with with people who'd gathered for a peaceful vigil there. Police in riot gear removed the protesters from the area after about an hour. That was enough time to expose a powerful divide in how people in Brussels are responding to terror.
      Charges filed: A suspect identified as "Faycal C" faces several charges, including "terrorist murder," the Belgium Federal Prosecutor's Office said in a statement Saturday. Authorities haven't detailed what link the suspect allegedly had to the bombings.
      Manhunts continue: Authorities are still searching for two men seen in surveillance footage who they say are suspects in the bombings: A man wearing a black hat who pushed a luggage cart through the Brussels airport and a man spotted holding a large bag at the Maalbeek metro station.
      Investigators are searching for the man in the black hat shown in surveillance footage at the Brussels airport.
      Sweeping raids: Police carried out 13 raids in and around the Belgian capital on Sunday, taking in nine people for questioning. Five of them were released after in-depth interviews; four remain in custody.
        Arrests in Belgium and beyond: As investigators try to piece together the network behind the Brussels attacks and crack down on terror threats across Europe, they appear to be casting a wide net. Since the Brussels bombings, arrests have been made in Belgium, France, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands.
        • "Devastated" airport: Officials say it's too soon to say when the Brussels airport will reopen. Staffers will test a temporary set-up on Tuesday, the airport said, but "a restart in the short term is not possible in the devastated infrastructure."
        Victims identified: Identifying bombing victims is a painstaking process. And investigators aren't done yet; so far, they've identified the remains of 32 people. Details have emerged about several of the people confirmed dead, including an American couple that had lived in Belgium since 2014, a Peruvian chef and a Belgian law student.
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        Tales of survival: We also learned more about the people who managed to survive the bombings, including a Dutch husband and wife who live in Las Vegas and were checking in to fly home when the blasts tore through the Brussels airport.
          Peace march canceled: Organizers canceled a peace march planned in the Belgian capital Sunday because of security concerns.
          Concert called off: Pop star Mariah Carey was supposed to be belting out hit songs at a concert in Brussels on Sunday, but she called off the show over safety concerns.