The Borneo Post

‘Daesh landlord’ in the dock in first Paris attacks trial

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PARIS: The first trial stemming from the November 2015 Paris terror attacks opens yesterday when Jawad Bendaoud appears in court, charged with harbouring two of the jihadists in the aftermath of the carnage.

Bendaoud, 31, became a national laughing stock after a television interview in which he came across as clueless, insisting “I didn’t know they were terrorists”.

It provided a rare reason to laugh after the deadliest attacks in France since World War II, spawning endless parodies on the internet mocking his apparent naivety.

Bendaoud stands accused of lending his apartment to Abdelhamid Abaaoud – a senior Islamic State jihadist suspected of coordinati­ng the attacks that killed 130 people – and his accomplice Chakib Akrouh.

The court will seek to determine whether Bendaoud actively conspired in helping the pair to hide out or whether he got caught up in events unknowingl­y.

Anti- terror police killed Abaaoud, Akrouh, and Abaaoud’s cousin Hasna Aitboulahc­en in a ferocious assault on the apartment on Nov 18, five days after the attacks.

Bendaoud gave his now infamous interview to BFM television just as armed officers were surroundin­g the apartment in the gritty SaintDenis suburb north of Paris.

“Someone asked me for a favour, I helped them out,” he said, adding that all he knew was that they were from Belgium and wanted access to water and a place to pray.

“I was asked to give accommodat­ion to two people for three days and I did the favour,” said the bespectacl­ed Bendaoud, wearing a leather jacket with his hair gelled back.

“If I’d known, do you really think I would have hosted them?”

The clip became a viral sensation, with internet users mocking his apparent lack of curiosity about his guests, at a time when a huge manhunt had been launched for jihadists.

The press nicknamed Bendaoud the ‘Daesh landlord’ after another name for IS, and his own lawyer Xavier Nogueras described him as “the one we laughed about, having cried so much”.

The case will turn on what Bendaoud, a Saint- Denis native with a long criminal record, knew about the men.

He was previously sentenced to eight years in jail for killing a man in a fight over a mobile phone, and was released in 2013. — AFP

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