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Body found in Belgium is missing rogue soldier

A body found Sunday in eastern Belgium was that of a soldier suspected of extreme-right views who went missing after stealing arms and threatening public figures, the country’s defence minister and chief of staff said in a statement.

Prosecutors had earlier said that the body of a man who appeared to have shot himself was likely Conings “according to the first elements of the investigation.

“The cause of death is probably, according to initial findings, attributable to suicide by firearm,” the earlier statement had said.

Hundreds of police and army personnel were deployed last month to hunt for Conings, 46, after his abandoned vehicle was found near the Dutch border with four rocket launchers inside.

Conings, who reportedly served in Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan, was suspected of having stolen the weapons from a military base where he worked as an instructor.

The body’s discovery was first reported Sunday after a town mayor said he had found it during a bike ride in a forest near where Conings’s car was abandoned last month.

“During my mountain bike tour this morning, in a part where few people come, I smelled a strong corpse odour,” Johan Tollenaere of the nearby town of Maaseik told VRT news.

“I immediately thought of Jurgen Conings and notified the police. They found the body,” he said.

The manhunt dominated newspaper headlines in the country, with some labelling Conings the “Belgian Rambo” after the 1980s action film starring Sylvester Stallone.

Belgian Justice Minister Vincent Van Quickenborne said security services had searched the right region, “but it concerned a very large zone”.

The body “was found just outside that search zone,” he told VTM news.

Federal police quickly cordoned off the area and the army’s bomb squad joined the scene along with explosive-detection dogs, VRT news said.

– ‘Sad news’ –

Among the people Conings had threatened is Marc Van Ranst, a leading virologist who has become a target for conspiracy theorists, Covid-sceptics and the Flemish far-right in Belgium during the coronavirus crisis.

While Conings was still at large, Van Ranst and his family were moved to an undisclosed location.

“My thoughts go out to the relatives and children of Jurgen Conings. For them this is very sad news, because they lose a father, a relative or a friend,” Van Ranst tweeted.

The affair has been an embarrassment for the government as it was later revealed that Conings was on a watch list for his far-right views but still had access to weapons.

He also drew online backing, with Facebook shutting down a support page that had garnered 45,000 members in just a few days.

Defence Minister Ludivine Dedonder decried the online backing for the fugitive — condemning in particular support from within Belgium’s armed forces.

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