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Updated 23 Mar, 2016 10:11am

Witnesses recall blood, dust and chaos in Brussels

WITNESSES described chaotic scenes of blood, dust and flying glass after the blasts rocked Brussels. Here are some of their accounts:

Entrepreneur Marc Noel, 63, was awaiting a flight from Brussels to the US city of Atlanta when he decided to buy some automobile magazines for the flight - an act he thinks may have saved his life.

He was in an airport shop when the first explosion struck about 50 metres away, bringing down a chunk of the ceiling.

“People were crying, shouting, children. It was a horrible experience,” said Noel, a Belgian who lives in Raleigh, North Carolina. “I don’t want to think about it, but I would probably have been in that place when the bomb went off.”

He said a second blast hit 10 to 15 seconds later.

“This feel likes war - fire engines, police everywhere,” said Noel, as he and hundreds of other passengers toting their hand luggage were evacuated to the town of Zavantem.

“I was as close as I could be to the other side,” he said. “It hasn’t happened yet. I guess it’s not my hour.”

Georgian journalist Ketevan Kardava was lining up for a flight to Geneva just after 8am when, she said, something black and suitcase-shaped exploded in front of the Delta Airlines counter nearby. She said the glass walls shattered and smoke filled the air.

“Everything was broken,” she said. “We were crying, shouting, running we didn’t know where.”

Minutes later, amid the chaos, a second explosion sounded, she said. By then, chaos had enveloped the terminal building and she could see very little.

Security forces herded thousands of people to the back of the airport, where she said they were waiting to learn when it would be safe enough to leave.

Anthony Deloos, who works for check-in and baggage services firm Swissport, said the first blast hit near a counter where passengers pay for overweight luggage.

“Twenty metres from us we heard a big explosion,” he said. “It’s like when you’re in a party and suddenly your hearing go out, from like a big noise.”

He said shredded paper was flying through the air, and he thought a hoarding had fallen down, but a colleague told him to run.

“I jumped into a luggage chute to be safe,” he said.

Ralph Usbeck, 55, an electronics technician from Berlin, was checking in his baggage for an American Airlines flight to Florida when the first blast struck.

“I assumed it was training, but some litter was in the air, so I was not sure if it was a terrorist act,” he recalled.

“Seconds later, a much more heavy, heavy detonation happened, some more distance (away) but much more heavy. This was the moment I realised this was a terrorist act.

“The first detonation, very few people got panic(ked). The others didn’t realise what happened, or they looked around. But the second explosion was much more heavy - panic, crying and everywhere this dirty dust, like from concrete.”

Outside, he saw several injured people, including “a man who had injuries on his leg and his hair was partly burned and partly some white dust in his hair”.

“It took a very, very long time till the ambulances came,” Usbeck said. “Maybe half an hour.”

Jef Versele, 40, from Ghent, Belgium, said he was at the airport and about to check in when he heard two blasts and suddenly the air was full of broken glass.

“Everything was coming down - glassware. It was chaos, it was unbelievable. It was the worst thing,” he said.

“People were running away. There were lots of people on the ground. A lot of people are injured.”

Published in Dawn, March 23rd, 2016

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