A Belgian court on Friday ordered that 46 suspected members of a radical Islamist group, believed to be involved in sending young fighters to Syria, stand trial later this year, AFP reports.
Sixteen people alleged to be part of Sharia4Belgium, including its head Fouad Belkacem, face charges of leading a terrorist organization, the federal justice office said.
The remaining 30 will be tried on charges of belonging to Sharia4Belgium, it said, according to AFP.
However, only eight of the 46 ordered to face trial are currently in Belgium, scene last month of an attack at a Jewish museum in Brussels that left four people dead and shocked the country.
The others are believed to be in Syria where some of them may have been killed, the federal justice office said.
“The trial is likely to take place in September, at the earliest,” a judiciary spokesman was quoted as saying by the Belga news agency.
Sharia4Belgium, based in the northern port city of Antwerp, campaigned for the introduction of Sharia Islamic law in the country.
In 2012, it said it was disbanding but the authorities suspect that it has continued to recruit dozens of volunteers to fight in Syria.
That year, Belkacem was charged with stoking hatred and violence, after he posted an 11-minute video on YouTube in which he spoke against the banning of the niqab (Muslim veil) in Belgium.
The attack at the Jewish museum in the center of Brussels has raised fears of a resurgence of anti-Semitic violence in Europe and of terror strikes from foreign fighters returning from Syria.
Belgium has been active in working with its EU partners to tackle the problem and leaders of the G7 industrialized nations recently also agreed to take up the issue.
(Arutz Sheva’s North American Desk is keeping you updated until the start of Shabbat in New York. The time posted automatically on all Arutz Sheva articles, however, is Israeli time.)