BRUSSELS — A 35-day manhunt in Belgium that involved helicopters, armored vehicles, 400 soldiers and police officers, as well as reinforcements from Germany and the Netherlands, culminated on Sunday in the discovery of a body believed to be that of a missing soldier with links to the far right.
The body was found in a forest where the soldier, Jürgen Conings, 46, disappeared more than a month ago after threatening the government and virologists responsible for the country’s response to the coronavirus, the federal prosecutor said. At the time, the soldier was armed with four rocket launchers, a submachine gun and a semiautomatic pistol that he had taken from an army depot.
The prosecutor said an initial investigation indicated the body belonged to Mr. Conings, a shooting instructor who in February was classified as a high-level threat to national security. He appears to have shot himself, the authorities said.
In a letter to his girlfriend around the time he disappeared on May 17, Mr. Conings wrote that he would not give up without a fight.
“The so-called political elite and now virologists decide how you and I should live,” he wrote. The virologists and the government “have taken everything away from us,” he said. “I don’t care if I die or not.”
The soldier’s disappearance came at a time of frustration in Belgium over pandemic restrictions and the economic damage from them. The country has had a relatively large number of Covid-19 deaths per capita and has imposed one of the longest lockdowns in Europe.
The far-right camp in Belgium has used the pandemic to inflame public anger at the government. Reports from state security agencies warned as early as last spring of “the emergence of various right-wing extremist individuals and groups spreading conspiracy theories” about Covid-19.
Mr. Conings’s links to far-right extremists were under investigation by the federal prosecutor.
Before the soldier disappeared, he went to the house of Marc Van Ranst, a top virologist active in Belgium’s Covid-19 response, and waited outside for him to return home from work. But Dr. Van Ranst had taken his first afternoon off in 16 months and was already home.
It was not the first time Mr. Conings had threatened Dr. Van Ranst, a well-known public health figure in Belgium. Dr. Van Ranst had also drawn the ire of the far right for speaking out against racism and xenophobia.
After the soldier went missing, the Belgian authorities placed Dr. Van Ranst and his family in a safe location. When the body was discovered on Sunday, Dr. Van Ranst, who was celebrating his 56th birthday in hiding, told the local news media that he hoped to “get back to normal life soon.”
Although he said he had little sympathy for Mr. Conings, he expressed condolences to the soldier’s family.
Mr. Conings joined the military at…
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