Belgian police have released new CCTV footage showing the mysterious "man in white" wanted by the authorities over last week's airport attack.
In the video, the hat-wearing suspect appears to smile as he glances over and says something to his alleged accomplices, suicide bombers Ibrahim el Bakraoui and Najim Laachraoui.
Police have not named the suspect in the hat, but some Belgian media reports have suggested he is Faycal Cheffou, the independent journalist who was charged with terrorist murder over the attacks on Saturday.
Cheffou reportedly acted as a co-ordinator of aid for refugees arriving in Maximilian Park in Brussels last year.
The video was released as a victim of the airport bombing said there should be no backlash against Muslims following the terror attacks in Belgium.
Walter Benjamin has had a leg amputated since he was blown across the Zaventem airport terminal by two huge blasts caused by Islamic State suicide bombers.
But, hours after suspected far-right protesters chanting anti-immigrant slogans hijacked a peace protest in the centre of Brussels, Mr Benjamin warned ordinary Muslims should not be held responsible.
He told RTL: "I hope people will be smart enough to understand that 99.99% of the Muslim population is extraordinary and does not get involved (with extremism).
"Twenty or 30 people don't represent an entire community."
Belgian federal prosecutors have charged three more people with participating in terrorist activities following a series of raids on Sunday.
The trio - identified as Yassine A., Mohamed B. and Aboubaker O. by the federal prosecutors office - were among four people detained during 13 police raids in Brussels and the northern cities of Mechelen and Duffel.
A fourth person detained was released without charge, the prosecutors' statement said.
As police activity following the Brussels attacks spreads across Europe, Dutch police revealed they found ammunition in the house of a French national arrested in Rotterdam on suspicion of plotting an attack in France.
The man, 32, thought to be called Anis B., was detained on Sunday suspected of receiving orders from IS to attack targets in France along with Reda Kriket, who was detained near Paris last week.
"During the search, phones, SIM cards, hard drives, cash, ammunition and drugs were seized," a spokesman for the Dutch prosecutor, Wim de Bruin, told AFP.
No explosives were found during the raid in which a total of four men, including two suspects of Algerian background, were arrested, he added.
Meanwhile, staff at Brussels airport are preparing to test its capacity to partially resume passenger service on Tuesday.
A spokeswoman said 800 workers will test temporary infrastructure and new arrangements designed for passenger check-in.
But firefighters and the Belgian government will have to approve the new system before Brussels Airport can resume handling passenger traffic.
Before the bombings, the airport served some 600 flights a day and 23.5 million passengers per year.
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