BRUSSELS (Reuters) - At the end of what usually is a busy lunchtime with customers from nearby offices flocking to his leather goods store in one of Brussels' main shopping streets, manager Karen Arkelyan planned to close early on Monday.
"This is catastrophic, really very bad. We only had two or three tourists randomly walk in today. Most things are closed around here because of the security threat, people work from home, there are no buyers," he said.
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