Reuters has a few more details about the reports that Belgian police have carried out a series of raids today in Brussels linked to last week's attacks in Paris.
One raid was carried out in the Brussels district of Molenbeek and another in the neighboring district of Jette, a police source said, but would not say whether any arrests were made.
A government source would not comment on reports that the raids were linked to Bilal Hadfi, one of the Paris suicide bombers who had been based in Belgium.
The authorities in Belgium have launched six raids in the Brussels region linked to Bilal Hadfi, AP is reporting.
Hadfi is believed to have detonated a suicide bomb outside the Stade de France in Paris last week.
A 20-year-old French national who lived in Neder-over-Hembeek in Belgium, Hadfi was described as being until recently a "typical teenager who was obsessed with football."
Hadfi started to become radicalized, however, and after the attacks on Charlie Hebdo in January "there was a week of school left during which he told his classmates he was going to Syria," one of his former teachers said.
A doctor and former columnist at the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine who treated victims of the Paris attacks last week has said people should rally together in the aftermath of the tragedy.
Patrick Pelloux was one of the first emergency responders at the Stade de France on November 13. Just a few months earlier in January, Pelloux had given his colleagues at Charlie Hebdo emergency treatment after two gunmen opened fire on them, he told Australia's SBS News.
After the Charlie Hebdo attacks, in which 12 people were killed, emergency responders had "read a lot of military medical literature."
Pelloux said IS had "attacked the city of lights, the city that carries all the roots of multiculturalism, [and the city that] accepts tolerance, love, generosity."
The FBI and New York police are aware of an IS video suggesting America's most populous city is a potential target of attacks such as those in Paris, but do not consider there to be any "credible or specific threat," Mayor Bill de Blasio has said, according to Reuters.
The IS video shows Times Square and Herald Square and a suicide bomber holding what appears to be a trigger. The video also shows scenes from Paris.
The New York footage appeared in a previous IS video produced in April, suggesting that the new video was produced in haste to maximize propaganda opportunities following the Paris attacks.
The UK Foreign Office has advised British schools against trips to France until after November 22.
The advice is in line with guidelines issued by the French Ministry of Education, which has said foreign schools should avoid traveling to France during this time.
"As part of the national state of emergency, the French ministry of education has cancelled all school trips within France by French schools until [after] Sunday," the Foreign Office said.
French Prime Minister Manuel Valls has warned of the danger of an attack in France using "chemical or biological weapons," AFP reports.
"We must not rule anything out," Valls told lawmakers during a debate on extending a state of emergency following last week's attacks in Paris.
Large crowds are gathering in the Molenbeek neighborhood of Brussels in Belgium for a peace rally in solidarity with the victims of the Paris attacks.
Molenbeek, which has a population of around 100,000 and a high rate of unemployment, has been dubbed a "haven for terror" and a jihadi recruiting ground after Belgian police carried out a series of raids searching for suspects in last week's terror attacks in Paris. The neighborhood was also searched during counterterror operations following the Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris in January.
People at the vigil lit candles and held a moment of silence for the victims of the Paris attacks.
The Belgian Federal Prosecutor's office has told The Guardian that two of the Paris attackers, Brahim and Salah Abdesalam, had been interrogated earlier this year but were not detained because they were not seen as a threat.
Brahim Abdesalam blew himself up outside a Paris bar on November 13. He was questioned in February after being stopped in Turkey on suspicion of trying to travel to Syria to fight.
Brahim denied that he wanted to go to Syria and "there were no signs he was participating in terrorist activities," a spokesman for the Belgian Federal Prosecutor's office said.
"He was just a radicalized youngster."
Salah Abdesalam, who is being hunted by police, was also not deemed to be a threat.
The hashtag #JeSuisChien ("I Am Dog") is trending after French police announced earlier today that a police dog, Diesel, had been killed in the raid on an apartment in Saint-Denis in Paris, where several suspects in last week's deadly attacks were holed up.
The hashtag is being used to tweet tributes to the police dog. Diesel was killed when one of the suspects, a woman, detonated her suicide vest.
One French Twitter user tweeted to say that her cat supported the #JeSuisChien hashtag.
Some of the tweets have taken on a humorous or satirical air. Twitter user @Pochineko used the hashtag to tweet a picture of a dog clad in black and the caption "Expect us," a parody of the threat issued by the hacker collective Anonymous who have launched an online war against IS. Anonymous claims to have taken down more than 5,500 IS social media accounts.
The #JeSuisChien hashtag is reminiscent of the #JeSuisCharlie ("I am Charlie") hashtag, logo and slogan that trended following the January 7 terror attacks against the Paris office of the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine.
IS has shared the latest issue of its glossy English-language propaganda magazine, Dabiq, in which it published a photo of what it claims is the improvised bomb that brought down a Russian passenger plane over Egypt's Sinai peninsula last month.
The photo, which is now being widely shared on Twitter, shows a Schweppes Gold drink can and what seem to be a detonator and a switch.
The magazine also carries a photograph of what IS claims are the passports of Russians killed in the plane disaster. The passports were obtained by IS militants, the magazine claimed.
IS said in Dabiq that it had originally planned to "bring down a plane belonging to a nation in the American-led Western coalition against the Islamic State" after "discovering a way to compromise security at the Sharm el-Sheikh International Airport." However, the extremist group claimed it decided to attack a Russian plane instead after Russia began air strikes in Syria on September 30.
The timing of IS's release of its latest issue of Dabiq as well as its title -- "Just Terror" -- comes a day after Russian security chief Alexander Bortnikov said that a bomb had been planted on the plane equivalent to 1 kilogram of TNT. IS's affiliate in Sinai claimed responsibility for downing the plane, which shattered mid-air killing all 224 people on board.
IS's release of its terror-themed magazine comes after the group claimed responsibility for last week's terror attacks in Paris in which 129 people were killed.