Waterloo Region Record

Carlos the Jackal in court for 1974 grenade attack

- Philippe Sotto

PARIS — Once the world’s most-wanted fugitive, the man known as “Carlos the Jackal” appeared in a French court Monday for a deadly 1974 attack on a Paris shopping arcade, a trial that victims’ families awaited for decades.

The Venezuelan-born Ilich Ramirez Sanchez is accused of throwing a hand grenade from a mezzanine restaurant onto a shopping area in the French capital’s Latin Quarter. Two people were killed and 34 were injured at the trendy Drugstore Publicis.

Known worldwide as Carlos, the 67-year-old is already serving a life sentence in France for a series of murders and attacks he has been convicted of perpetrati­ng or organizing in the country on behalf of the Palestinia­n cause or communist revolution in the 1970s and ’80s.

As the trial opened Monday, Carlos denounced it as a “gross manipulati­on of justice” 42 years after the attack. He has denied involvemen­t and pleaded innocent.

The back and forth between him and a panel of judges provided some answers not usually heard from a criminal suspect asserting innocence.

Asked to state his profession, Carlos called himself a “profession­al revolution­ary,” and said “I’m doing fine” in prison — after more than 20 years behind bars.

At one point, the presiding judge asked him whether he had any regrets.

“Yes, I have regrets — because I’m kind-hearted — that I did not kill people I should have killed,” Carlos answered.

“I like people. I know what violence is. I don’t like violence. I saw massacres,” he added.

Speaking of his usual behaviour when he was confronted with tense situations, Carlos told the court: “I look at the scene and I shoot before everyone else. I have no merit, I was born like that.”

If convicted at the end of the new trial before a special terrorism court, he could get a third life sentence. Carlos, who was convicted of terrorism in 2011, is charged this time with multiple first-degree murders in relation with a terrorist enterprise.

At the time of the 1974 attack, he was 24 years old and already had joined the organizati­on Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, but hadn’t yet achieved worldwide notoriety.

When police arrived at the scene of the attack, they found a devastated mall with all the windows shattered, multiple bloodstain­s and a hole in the marble slab of the ground floor where the grenade fell.

The two men who died were hit by metal chips that perforated vital organs and caused internal bleeding, according to court documents.

His longtime lawyer, Isabelle Coutant-Peyre, claims that none of the witnesses had described a man resembling her client, and that the whole case was trumped-up.

The case took so long to go to trial because it was first dismissed for lack of evidence before being reopened when Carlos was arrested and imprisoned in France. His lawyers repeatedly argued against holding a trial, arguing the attack was too long ago and that it won’t make a difference for Carlos, already in prison for life.

“What need is there to hold this trial?” asked Coutant-Peyre, who married Carlos in a Muslim ceremony in 2001 that is not legally binding. “It’s a useless trial.”

The attack’s victims, however, are relieved. “The civil parties demand justice,” said Georges Holleaux, lawyer for the widows of the two men killed in the attack and other civil parties to the case.

Prosecutor Remi Crosson du Cormier argued that the trial remains relevant today.

“Democracy has two principal enemies — totalitari­anism, and terrorism,” he said, suggesting that Carlos is among “those who threaten democracy by their actions.”

 ?? MICHEL LIPCHITZ, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this 2000 photo, Venezuelan internatio­nal terrorist Carlos the Jackal, whose real name is Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, left, sits with his lawyer Isabelle Coutant-Peyre in a Paris courtroom. Sanchez is on trial for a deadly mall attack in 1974.
MICHEL LIPCHITZ, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this 2000 photo, Venezuelan internatio­nal terrorist Carlos the Jackal, whose real name is Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, left, sits with his lawyer Isabelle Coutant-Peyre in a Paris courtroom. Sanchez is on trial for a deadly mall attack in 1974.

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