The Belgian and French prime ministers yesterday held talks in Brussels aimed at bolstering counter-terror co-operation after Belgium came under fire for failing to help prevent the November Paris terror attacks.
Charles Michel of Belgium and Manuel Valls of France, joined by their interior and justice ministers, were also tackling the broader threat of terrorism across the European Union and the Schengen passport-free zone that allows unhindered travel, a French official said.
The talks focussed on how to reinforce “French-Belgian co-operation on the subject of fighting terrorism and radicalisation,” a French official said following tensions between the two neighbours over the issue.
The two sides were studying in particular how to improve the flow of intelligence sharing, the official said.
The French justice ministry will also send a magistrate to Belgium to act as a liaison on important cases, he added.
Belgium has rejected French criticism of its police and intelligence services over alleged failings in the run-up to the November 13 Paris attacks that killed 130 people and were claimed by the Islamic State group.  
Michel insisted “Belgium is not a lawless area” after investigators revealed some of the Paris assailants and those who allegedly helped them had come from the troubled immigrant neighbourhood of Molenbeek in the Belgian capital Brussels.
Islamic State said four of the nine assailants were of Belgian origin, including one of the organisers, Abdelhamid Abaaoud, who was killed in a French police raid days after the massacre. Three others were French and two were Iraqi.
Since mid-November, 11 people have been arrested and charged in Belgium in connection with the massacre. A key suspect, Salah Abdeslam, and his friend Mohamed Abrini, who are both from Molenbeek, are still at large.  
Despite the undercurrent of tension, France and Belgium have hailed their co-operation. “The co-operation between our services is excellent and is yielding results,” Michel told Belgium’s diplomatic corps recently. “It also shows what can be improved and what needs to be reinforced.”
In addition to French-Belgian cooperation, a French official said, the two sides will study “what actions can be taken” to fight terrorism at the European Union level and in the 26-nation Schengen zone, which includes most EU countries.  Paris in particular is pushing for a deal on sharing the names of airline passengers to help trace returning militants.
The prime ministers were accompanied by interior ministers Jan Jambon of Belgium and Bernard Cazeneuve of France as well as justice ministers Koen Geens of Belgium and Jean-Jacques Urvoas of France.