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Chapel Church

Belgian building and structure stubsCity of BrusselsEuropean church stubsRoman Catholic churches in BrusselsUse British English from October 2021
Onze Lieve Vrouw ter Kapellekerk Brussel 30 4 2017 08 20 19
Onze Lieve Vrouw ter Kapellekerk Brussel 30 4 2017 08 20 19

The Church of Our Lady of the Chapel (French: Église Notre-Dame-de-la-Chapelle, Dutch: Onze-Lieve-Vrouw-ter-Kapellekerk), or the Chapel Church (French: Église de la Chapelle, Dutch: Kapellekerk), is a Roman Catholic church located on the Place de la Chapelle/Kapelleplein in the Marolles/Marollen district of Brussels, Belgium. This site is served by Brussels-Chapel railway station.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Chapel Church (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Chapel Church
Rue de la Chapelle - Kapellestraat, City of Brussels Pentagon (Brussels)

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Wikipedia: Chapel ChurchContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 50.841666666667 ° E 4.3511111111111 °
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Address

Église Notre-Dame de la Chapelle - Onze-Lieve-Vrouw-ter-Kapellekerk

Rue de la Chapelle - Kapellestraat 21
1000 City of Brussels, Pentagon (Brussels)
Belgium
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Onze Lieve Vrouw ter Kapellekerk Brussel 30 4 2017 08 20 19
Onze Lieve Vrouw ter Kapellekerk Brussel 30 4 2017 08 20 19
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Jewish Museum of Belgium shooting
Jewish Museum of Belgium shooting

On the afternoon of 24 May 2014, a gunman opened fire at the Jewish Museum of Belgium in Brussels, killing four people. Three of them, an Israeli couple on holiday and a French woman, died at the scene. The fourth victim, a Belgian employee of the museum, was taken to the hospital but died of his injuries on 6 June. A little less than a week later, on 30 May 2014, a suspect was arrested in the French city of Marseille in connection with the shooting. The suspect was Mehdi Nemmouche, a 29-year-old French national of Algerian origin. A second suspect, Nacer Bendrer, was identified and arrested later. Prior to the shooting, Nemmouche had already spent time in French prisons, where he became involved in radical Islam. After his imprisonment, he also spent more than a year in Syria. It is also in prison where he met Bendrer, who was suspected of having supplied Nemmouche with the weapons used in the attack. Investigators identified a third suspect as well, but the charges against the third suspect were later dismissed due to the evidence against him being considered too weak. Nemmouche and Bendrer were formally indicted in April 2018, and tried before the court of assizes of Brussels in early 2019. After two months of trial hearings, a verdict was rendered: Nemmouche was found guilty of having committed the attack, whilst Bendrer was found guilty of being the co-author of the attack by having supplied Nemmouche with the weapons used in the attack. The theory that Nemmouche was framed by foreign intelligence officials, put forward by Nemmouche's defence, was rejected. Subsequently, Nemmouche was sentenced to life imprisonment whilst Bendrer was sentenced to 15 years of imprisonment. Both were later also sentenced to pay close to one million euro in damages to the victims' next of kin.