Jihadist (illustration)
Jihadist (illustration)Thinkstock

French police arrested four people suspected of links with jihadist terror networks Monday, three days after detaining a suspect in connection to last Saturday's deadly attack on a Jewish museum in Brussels.

Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve announced the sweep on Europe1 radio, but did not specify if the arrests in the Paris region and southern France were linked to the Brussels shooting suspect Mehdi Nemmouche.

"There are those who recruit jihadists," Cazeneuve said. "As we speak there have been arrests in the Ile-de-France and in the south of France."

The minister said he would not elaborate further at this stage but a police source said three of detainees were suspected of recruiting terrorists.

Nemmouche, 29, who was arrested last Friday in the southern French city of Marseille, is believed to have recorded a claim of responsibility for the May 24 Brussels attack in a 40-second video found in his possession along with a Kalashnikov and a handgun.

Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said the "repeat offender" explains in the film that he had attached a GoPro camera to his bag to record his shooting rampage, but it had not worked.

Instead Nemmouche later "filmed his weapons and said he carried out the attack against the Jews in Brussels", Belgian prosecutor Frederic Van Leeuw said.

Nemmouche was being grilled on Monday but has said little during his detention. 

Described as a "lone wolf" by the Paris prosecutor, Nemmouche became radicalized in prison and left for Syria on December 31, 2012, just three weeks after his release from jail.

He is believed to have fought there alongside fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) - Syria's most extreme Islamist group - and returned to Europe in March this year.

Some 780 people are thought to have left France to fight with jihadists in Syria, according to government estimates.

Cazeneuve on Monday evoked the problem of inmates being indoctrinated into radical Islam in French prisons, saying: "We have to react to this."

"As a start we can send properly trained imams who know the true spirit of Islam and its culture and who can go to prisons and explain this in prisons," he said.

In the attack last Saturdya, a lone gunman entered the Jewish museum in the heart of Brussels, removed an automatic rifle from a bag and opened fire through a door before leaving. The shooting left four dead, including Tel Aviv natives Miriam and Emmanuel Riva.

Philip Markovich, President of the Great Synagogue of Brussels located adjacent to the Jewish Museum in the Belgian capital, was quoted on Monday saying that Nemmouche's arrest had brought a "great sense of relief" to the Jews of Belgium.