Manawatu Standard

‘Carlos’ receives third life sentence

-

FRANCE: He was once the world’s most wanted fugitive. In his heyday, Ilich Ramierz Sanchez, dubbed ‘‘Carlos the Jackal,’’ was the most prominent political terrorist of his time and the centre of a worldwide manhunt that captured the world’s attention.

But on Wednesday, a French court convicted the man to life in prison - for the third time.

Wednesday’s verdict may quietly close this last chapter in a bizarre story that won Carlos internatio­nal infamy.

The Venezuelan-born militant joined the ranks of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a militant revolution­ary group, at the age of 24. After joining, he carried out a spate of deadly attacks in the 1970s and ‘80s.

‘‘Terrorists weren’t even known then,’’ said Billy Waugh, a former CIA operative who helped track him. ‘‘Carlos was the man,’’ he told the BBC in 2014.

Carlos evaded police for decades, but French intelligen­ce services finally captured him in Khartoum, Sudan, in 1994. They extradited him to France, where he’s been imprisoned ever since.

The latest trial centred on his 1974 grenade attack on a Paris shopping area that killed two and wounded 34. When the trial began in March, he claimed any killings he carried out were in the name of the ‘‘revolution.’’

‘‘No-one has executed more people than me in the Palestinia­n resistance ... (and) I am the only survivor,’’ Carlos said. ‘‘In all the fighting, there were collateral victims, it’s unfortunat­e.’’ He once bragged to a Venezuelan newspaper he killed 2000 people in over 100 attacks.

The Marxist revolution­ary was already sentenced to two life prison sentences - one for killing two French police officers in 1975 and another for orchestrat­ing attacks on Parisian streets and train stations in 1982 and 1983 that killed 11 and wounded 150.

In one of his most famous attacks, Carlos and five other militants stormed a meeting of the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries meeting in Austria in 1975, killing three and taking 60 hostages, before escaping with hostages in tow to Algeria.

The latest case took more than 20 years to go to trial. It was initially dismissed after his capture in 1994 due to lack of evidence. Then when prosecutor­s brought the case forward again, Carlos’ lawyers challenged each step at every turn, dragging the procedure on for decades, and in turn arguing the case extended beyond the normal statute of limitation­s. When he took the stand this month he denounced the case as ‘‘an absurd trial’’ some four decades after the crime.

But the fivejudge panel who delivered the verdict wasn’t swayed and gave him a third life sentence. (A life sentence is the harshest verdict that can be doled out in France.)

For families of the victims, it was a far overdue judgment.

‘‘Today we are extremely relieved,’’ said Georges Holleaux, the lawyer representi­ng the two dead victims’ families.

‘‘Today’s verdict is proof that there is nowhere, never, impunity if one is ready to fight. Let perpetrato­rs of terrorist crimes know it: Now the victims will never give up,’’ Holleaux said.

French authoritie­s aren’t investigat­ing Carlos for any other crimes, so this is likely the last case against him. The story may not be over yet, though. Carlos’s lawyers vowed to appeal Wednesday’s decision. ‘‘The media truth has permeated the judicial truth. The magistrate­s didn’t dare acquit Carlos,’’ Francis Vuillemin, one of his lawyers, said.

‘‘Let’s meet again in one year, for the appeal trial and for a new performanc­e in this justice drama.’’ - Washington Post

 ??  ?? Ilich Ramierz Sanchez
Ilich Ramierz Sanchez

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand