Three more prisoners were on the run from Belgian jails today, bringing the total to 12 in the past two weeks.
The escapes have heaped embarrassment on the government, which claims its plans to better secure key jails and courthouses have been held back by lack of money.
The justice ministry said the three escaped from the sprawling Palace of Justice courthouse in central Brussels when two armed men burst into a court hearing and took them with them.
Two weeks ago three convicts broke out of a high-security prison near Bruges when a helicopter flew into the compound to take them away. Last week, six prisoners escaped from a prison near the port city of Antwerp by scaling the wall with a ladder.
Five of the escapees have been recaptured, but seven remain at large.
There have been plans to put nets over exercise yards to make it impossible for helicopters to land, but implementation has been slow.
Plans to seal off parts of the building to secure the Palace of Justice, one of Brussels’ best-known landmarks, have been met with opposition from a foundation seeking to protect the monumental 19th century beaux-arts structure, whose 104-foot-high dome hulks over the capital.
“It is an icon for Belgium and the capital. It is a monument of beautiful architecture but it cannot be secured,” complained Justice Minister Stefaan De Clerck. “There are so many hallways, so many entries.”
There had already been a similar escape from the Palace of Justice in January.
Mr De Clerck said he had a plan to seal off a section of the building for high-security cases “but it clashed with the concept of the heritage foundation.” He said he could not even install cameras in the building.