Hundreds of special forces hunt heavily armed Belgian soldier who vowed to fight lockdowns

Hundreds of special forces troops have joined the hunt for a heavily armed Belgian soldier who has threatened the country’s top virologist and vowed to fight to the death against lockdown restrictions. 

Corporal Jurgen Conings, 46, disappeared on Monday after threatening Marc Van Ranst, a leading academic who has become a public figure in Belgium during the coronavirus crisis.

The 46-year-old is thought to be on the run in the Hoge Kempen forest after stealing four rocket launchers, a machine gun and a pistol from one of the barracks where he worked.

He left several notes, writing in one to his family that he ‘could no longer live in a society where politicians and virologists have taken everything away from us.’

Conings warned that he ‘would join the resistance and would not surrender.’  

Hundreds of special forces troops have joined the hunt for a heavily armed Belgian soldier with extreme-right sympathies who is believed to be hiding in a national park. Corporal Jurgen Conings disappeared on Monday after threatening public figures, including a top coronavirus expert, and vowing to fight to the death against lockdowns

Hundreds of special forces troops have joined the hunt for Conings on Wednesday, as the search stretched into its third day

Hundreds of special forces troops have joined the hunt for Conings on Wednesday, as the search stretched into its third day

Late on Wednesday, the federal prosecutor’s office said some 250 police officers and soldiers were deployed to the Hoge Kempen national park in the northeast near the Dutch border.

Shots were reportedly heard as teams of heavily-armed officers entered the park, with armoured vehicles and helicopters on standby.

This followed the discovery nearby on Tuesday night of Conings’ vehicle. The four missile launchers were inside, along with some munitions.  

Conings is armed with a handgun and an FN P90 semi-automatic submachine gun, which can pierce bullet proof vests, The Times reported. While in the army, he gave hostile environment training courses.

The soldier has combat experience as a sniper and has been described as ‘an acute threat,’ with the public warned not to approach him.

Conings, whose Twitter profile describes himself as a ‘Belgian Air Force soldier who likes fitness, bodybuilding and boxing’, already featured on a list of extremists monitored by Belgium’s anti-terrorist agency.

He was one of around 30 Belgian military personnel with known extremist sympathies, officials said, but he remained on active duty, training Belgian troops ahead of deployment on overseas missions.

Conings is armed with a handgun and an FN P90 semi-automatic submachine gun, which can pierce bullet proof vests

Conings is armed with a handgun and an FN P90 semi-automatic submachine gun, which can pierce bullet proof vests

Prime Minister Alexander de Croo told Flemish broadcaster VTM it was ‘unacceptable’ that the fugitive had been allowed to access the weapons, and Defence Minister Ludivine Dedonder said an inquiry would be launched.

Conings’ police wanted notice shows a thick set man with a shaved head. In his Twitter profile, he appears shirtless, revealing his muscular, tattooed torso.

A spokesman for the prosecutors, Eric Van Duyse, told AFP news agency that Conings was ‘well trained but seems to have ideas associated with the extreme right’.

He had disappeared with weapons, he said, and had left behind a letter containing ‘worrying elements’ including threats to the state and public figures. 

Justice Minister Vincent Van Quickenborne told VRT television: ‘There are signs that he is violent and, over the course of the past 24 hours, evidence has emerged that shows this man presents an acute threat.’

Dutch police said they were monitoring the situation but had no reason to believe Conings had crossed the border.

Shots were reportedly heard as teams of heavily-armed officers entered the park, with armoured vehicles and helicopters on standby

Shots were reportedly heard as teams of heavily-armed officers entered the park, with armoured vehicles and helicopters on standby

Among the people Conings has threatened is Marc Van Ranst, a leading academic who has become a public figure in Belgium during the coronavirus crisis.

He is an active social media user and his views have made him a target of conspiracy theorists, Covid-sceptics and with the Flemish far-right.

In an interview with AFP in September, Van Ranst said he had fallen foul of the nationalists and received death threats after speaking out against racism and xenophobia.

‘I couldn’t stay silent about that and the right-wing parties hate me,’ he said.

Already living under police protection, he and his family have been moved to a place of safety.

In its annual report last year, Belgium’s civilian security and intelligence agency expressed concern about a growing right-wing extremist threat.

In particular, it noted that these groups are increasingly seeking weapons in order to prepare for violent action.

But it added: ‘The main threat comes from those individuals known as ‘lone actors’, who become radicalised and plan violent actions on their own.’