Belgium’s King Philippe and Queen Mathilde will join a commemoration on Monday to mark the fifth anniversary of suicide bomb attacks in Brussels that killed 32 people. Prime Minister Alexander De Croo will join them during a series of events across the Belgian capital to mark the country’s deadliest attack since the Second World War. A minute’s silence will be held at Brussels Airport and Maelbeek Metro station where the bombers struck. Further events will be held on the Rue de La Loi at the site of a monument to the victims, the royal palace said. The remembrance will include speeches and tributes to the victims from the terrorist attacks on March 22, 2016. Two suicide bombers carried out the attacks but 10 people will go on trial later this year for their alleged roles in the bombings. The trial will be held in the former Nato military headquarters, now refurbished as a high-security courthouse on the outskirts of Brussels. The defendants include Salah Abdeslam, 31, said to be the only surviving member of the group behind the November 2015 attacks in France that left 130 dead. The Frenchman, who grew up in the Brussels district of Molenbeek, was in 2018 sentenced to 20 years in prison in Belgium for shooting at the city's police days before his arrest in 2016. Mohamed Abrini known as the ‘man in the hat’ after he appeared on security camera shortly before the Brussels Airport bombing, is also due to stand trial. He was seen leaving the area. Osama Krayem, 28, is accused of accompanying the bombers to the Metro. Others accused could face lesser charges of "taking part in the activities of a terrorism group".