Belfast Telegraph

Gunman’s widow convicted in Charlie Hebdo terror attack trial

Wife of Paris killer who was spirited out of France is found guilty in her absence

- By Lori Hinnant

THE fugitive widow of a gunman and a man described as his logisticia­n have been convicted of terrorism charges in the trial of 14 people linked to the January 2015 Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris.

It ends the three-month trial of the 14 people linked to the three days of killings across Paris claimed jointly by so-called Islamic State and al Qaida.

The attacks were launched against the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo and a kosher supermarke­t.

All three attackers died in police raids.

The widow, Hayat Boumeddien­e, fled to Syria and is believed to still be alive.

The two men who spirited her out of France, who were also tried in absentia, are thought to be dead. Eleven others were present.

Three of the 14 fled to Syria just ahead of the attacks on January 7-9 2015, which left 17 dead along with the three gunmen - who claimed the killings in the names of al Qaida and Islamic State.

The other 11, all men, formed a circle of friends and prison acquaintan­ces who claimed any facilitati­ng they may have done was unwitting or for more runof-the mill crimes such as armed robbery.

It was the coronaviru­s infection of Ali Riza Polat, described as the lieutenant of the virulently anti-semitic market attacker, Amedy Coulibaly, that forced the suspension of the trial for a month.

Polat’s profane outbursts and insults drew rebukes from the chief judge.

.

Among those giving evidence were the widows of Cherif and Said Kouachi, the brothers who stormed Charlie Hebdo’s offices on January 7 2015, decimating the newspaper’s editorial staff in what they said was an act of vengeance for its publicatio­n of caricature­s of the Prophet Muhammad years before.

The offices had been firebombed before and were unmarked, and editors had round the clock protection — but it was not enough.

In all, 12 people died in that attack.

The next day, Coulibaly shot and killed a young policewoma­n after failing to attack a Jewish community centre in the suburb of Montrouge.

By then, the Kouachis were on the run.

Authoritie­s did not link the shooting to the massacre at Charlie Hebdo immediatel­y.

They were closing in on the fugitive brothers when the first alerts came of a gunman inside a kosher supermarke­t.

Coulibaly entered, carrying an assault rifle, pistols and explosives.

With a Gopro camera fixed to his torso, he methodical­ly fired on an employee and a customer, then killed a second customer before ordering a cashier to close the store’s metal blinds, images shown to a hushed courtroom.

“You are Jews and French, the two things I hate the most,” Coulibaly told them.

Some 25 miles away, t he Kouachi brothers were cornered in a printing shop with their own hostages.

Ultimately, all three attackers died in near-simultaneo­us police raids.

It was the first attack in Europe claimed by Islamic State, which struck Paris again later that year to even deadlier effect.

At the heart of the trial is who helped them and how.

Prosecutor­s said the Kouachis essentiall­y self-financed their attack, while Coulibaly and his wife took out fraudulent loans.

Boumeddien­e, the only woman on trial, fled to Syria days before the attack with two other absent defendants, Mohamed and Mehdi Belhoucine.

The brothers are believed to be dead.

 ??  ?? Hayat Boumeddien­e fled to Syria
Hayat Boumeddien­e fled to Syria

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland