Cape Times

Paris attacks suspect stays mum at trial Shootings killed 130 people

- REUTERS

THE PRIME surviving suspect in the 2015 Islamic State attacks on Paris appeared to refuse to speak as his trial in Belgium over a shooting got under way in Brussels yesterday.

Salah Abdeslam, wearing a white shirt and his hair and beard long in contrast to the cropped, clean-shaven man seen in wanted posters across Europe during his four months on the run, was asked by the judge to rise and give his name.

The 28-year-old, in his first public appearance, sat and seemed not to answer.

After a brief adjournmen­t to hear arguments about the representa­tion of victims’ families, the hearing continued with the questionin­g of Abdeslam’s alleged accomplice in the shooting incident on March 15, 2016, when several French and Belgian police officers were wounded in Brussels.

Abdeslam’s apparent reluctance to engage with the court may prove a disappoint­ment to Parisians who hoped he might end more than two years of silence to give some indication of how and why the attacks which killed 130 people were organised.

His trial in France is not expected until next year. He was not charged over the Islamic State suicide bombings in Brussels a week after the shoot-out and four days after his arrest – though prosecutor­s say the March 22 attacks, which killed 32 people, were triggered by the cell’s fear that Abdeslam might reveal plans for a new attack in France under interrogat­ion.

Abdeslam arrived under heavy guard from France, where he has been held under 24-hour suicide watch near Paris.

He will spend the nights of the coming week of Belgian hearings in a high-security French prison across the border.

Co-accused Sofien Ayari, a 24-year-old Tunisian, told the court he had been with Islamic State forces in Syria and was with Abdeslam at the site of the shoot-out.

Ayari and Abdeslam face up to 40 years in prison for attempted murder in relation to terrorism.

When police hunting for the Paris suspects went to an apartment in the Brussels borough of Forest, those inside opened fire, wounding several.

The two accused are alleged to have fled, leaving a third gunman to hold off police until he was shot dead.

Four days later, Abdeslam and Ayari were arrested in the Brussels borough of Molenbeek, close to the former’s family home. A French citizen, he was born and raised among the Belgian capital’s large Moroccan immigrant community.

Lawyers for Abdeslam accept he was in Paris on Friday, November 13, 2015, when gunmen and suicide bombers killed 130 at the Bataclan concert hall, near the national stadium and at cafés and restaurant­s.

His elder brother, with whom he ran a bar in Brussels, was among those who blew himself up.

Prosecutor­s believe the younger Abdeslam, whom they accuse of running logistics for the attack including ferrying fighters from Syria across Europe, would have met the same fate had his explosive vest not malfunctio­ned.

How the pair, from a broadly secular background with a history of petty crime, were transforme­d into alleged cogs within extensive Islamic State cells operating in Belgium and France is unclear.

A third brother, who has visited Abdeslam in prison, told a Belgian newspaper in December that he might be preparing to talk, inspired by a devout religious faith.

The trial had been due to start in late December but was delayed after Abdeslam belatedly reappointe­d a defence counsel, who then requested more time to prepare the case.

Lawyers do not rule out that there could be further adjournmen­ts this week.

The trial has triggered a high alert in Brussels. More than 100 police are expected to be deployed in and around the mammoth 19th-century Palace of Justice, which dominates the skyline over the Renaissanc­e city centre.

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? A police convoy carrying Salah Abdeslam and other members of the trial arrives under police guard at the Brussels Justice Palace.
PICTURE: AP A police convoy carrying Salah Abdeslam and other members of the trial arrives under police guard at the Brussels Justice Palace.

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