The catch of a suspect in the 2015 Paris assaults is "a noteworthy blow" to the Islamic State (IS) gathering in Europe, France's inside pastor has said.
Bernard Cazeneuve said security strengths had figured out how to "weaken a few people who are unmistakably to a great degree unsafe and completely decided".
France is looking for suspect Salah Abdeslam's removal from Belgium.
He was injured and captured in a sensational strike in Brussels on Friday following four months on the run.
Somewhere in the range of 130 individuals were executed and handfuls injured in different assaults in Paris on 13 November. IS said it did the shootings and bombings.
Senior security authorities both in France and Belgium are meeting to survey the circumstance.
Abdeslam, a 26-year-old French national conceived in Brussels, had lived in the Molenbeek area of the Belgian capital before the Paris assaults.
He is accepted to have come back to Belgium instantly after the assaults, in which his sibling Brahim exploded himself.
Molenbeek assault: As it happened
Salah Abdeslam's fortunes runs out
Is Molenbeek a sanctuary for Belgian jihadis?
The subject of a huge manhunt, Abdeslam was captured around 500m (1,600ft) from his home.
Another man who was harmed and captured, Monir Ahmed Alaaj, was additionally on a needed rundown, Belgian prosecutors said.
Three individuals from a family blamed for harboring Abdeslam have likewise been kept.
The strike came after Abdeslam's fingerprints were found in a level in another Brussels area, which was attacked on Tuesday.
Abdeslam was injured in the leg as police moved in. Emotional footage demonstrated to him being packaged into a squad car after a volley of gunfire. Both suspects were released from healing facility on Saturday.
Bernard Cazeneuve said security strengths had figured out how to "weaken a few people who are unmistakably to a great degree unsafe and completely decided".
France is looking for suspect Salah Abdeslam's removal from Belgium.
He was injured and captured in a sensational strike in Brussels on Friday following four months on the run.
Somewhere in the range of 130 individuals were executed and handfuls injured in different assaults in Paris on 13 November. IS said it did the shootings and bombings.
Senior security authorities both in France and Belgium are meeting to survey the circumstance.
Abdeslam, a 26-year-old French national conceived in Brussels, had lived in the Molenbeek area of the Belgian capital before the Paris assaults.
He is accepted to have come back to Belgium instantly after the assaults, in which his sibling Brahim exploded himself.
Molenbeek assault: As it happened
Salah Abdeslam's fortunes runs out
Is Molenbeek a sanctuary for Belgian jihadis?
The subject of a huge manhunt, Abdeslam was captured around 500m (1,600ft) from his home.
Another man who was harmed and captured, Monir Ahmed Alaaj, was additionally on a needed rundown, Belgian prosecutors said.
Three individuals from a family blamed for harboring Abdeslam have likewise been kept.
The strike came after Abdeslam's fingerprints were found in a level in another Brussels area, which was attacked on Tuesday.
Abdeslam was injured in the leg as police moved in. Emotional footage demonstrated to him being packaged into a squad car after a volley of gunfire. Both suspects were released from healing facility on Saturday.
French President Francois Hollande said Abdeslam's capture was "a vital minute".
"The fight against terrorism does not end today evening time, despite the fact that this is a triumph," Mr Hollande told a news gathering on Friday with Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel.
"We should get each one of the individuals who permitted, sorted out or encouraged these assaults and we understand that they are significantly more various than we suspected before and had distinguished," he said.
Mr Michel said the attack had come after "extraordinary" analyst work and said it was a "vital result in the fight for vote based system".
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