Brussels airport prepares to reopen as government, police agree tighter security deal

Bomb-hit Brussels Airport is on track to reopen on Sunday, a Belgian government source said, after the authorities reached a deal with police on introducing tighter security at the key travel hub following the March 22 suicide attacks.
“There is an agreement,” Vincent Gilles, head of the SLFP police union, said after lengthy talks on Friday. He said the government and the airport operator had given in to their main demand for “systematic checks” of passengers and their luggage before going through customs.
The agreement removed the final obstacle standing in the way of the airport’s partial resumption of services. The next step is for the government to give the formal go-ahead for the reopening.
“We hope that the airport can reopen Sunday morning,” a government source said.
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The operator of Brussels Airport, whose departure hall was wrecked in last week’s blasts, had said on Thursday the airport was “technically ready” to resume partial services after testing new, temporary check-in facilities.