The National - News

Brussels trial opens for Paris terror suspect and Europe’s most wanted man

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A suspected terrorist linked to the 2015 attacks in Paris that left 130 people dead goes on trial today over a shoot-out with police. He had been on the run for four months as Europe’s most wanted man.

Salah Abdeslam, 28, is accused of attempting to murder Belgian and French police officers who turned up at a property in Brussels for what they thought would be a routine search linked to the Paris attacks.

Abdeslam is alleged to have escaped the shoot-out that left another militant dead and four police officers wounded in the Forest district of Brussels. He was captured three days later in another part of the city.

The trial in Brussels deals with only the shoot-out that led to his capture. He could be sentenced to 40 years in prison if found guilty.

Abdeslam is due to stand trial at a later date in France over his alleged involvemen­t in the attacks on the French capital in November 2015.

Those attacks targeted the Stade de France sports stadium and the Bataclan music venue, where ISIL-sympathise­rs sprayed concert goers with bullets, killing 89.

His older brother Brahim Abdeslam died when he detonated explosives outside a bar, seriously injuring two people during the attacks.

Abdeslam had been sought since the day after the attacks when surveillan­ce footage showed him returning to Belgium. Reports suggested that he was in a car with two accomplice­s that was pulled over close to the Belgian-Paris border but was let go after background checks did not highlight links to extremism.

He was finally detained during a raid in the western

Brussels district of Molenbeek, an area of high unemployme­nt and a hotbed of militant activity in the Belgian capital, where he used to run a bar with his brother.

Abdeslam is accused of “attempted murder in a terrorist context” at the trial in Brussels, where there will be a high level of security.

Prosecutor­s believe that he was also associated with three men who blew themselves up at Brussels Airport and on the city’s metro system in March 2016, which left 32 people dead. His arrest was believed to be the trigger for the attacks four days later.

Reports have suggested that Abdeslam’s role in the Paris attacks involved renting cars and apartments, and of helping members of the team get to Europe. He has refused to answer questions to investigat­ors after being returned to France from Belgium.

He is being held in solitary confinemen­t in France and will be brought by armoured vehicle from a high-security prison in France for every day of the hearings.

The estimated four-day trial could result in further embarrassm­ent for the Belgian authoritie­s whose security agencies and police were criticised over the failure to track down and capture Abdeslam after the Paris attacks.

An internal Belgian police report said police had warned their superiors in early 2015 that the brothers were radicalise­d, having linked them to Abdelhamid Abaaoud, the ringleader of the Paris attacks and a known ISIL member. Abdeslam and Abaaoud had served in the same jail for armed robbery.

The Paris and Brussels attacks highlighte­d shortcomin­gs in Belgian intelligen­ce gathering and staff shortages. Europol, the EU’s policing intelligen­ce agency, admitted that the Paris attacks showed that the exchange of informatio­n “needs improving” after recriminat­ions over the failure to trace members of the Paris gang.

The attacks also cast light on problems of radicalisa­tion in Belgium, which had the highest number of extremist foreign fighters per capita heading to Iraq and Syria to join ISIL.

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 ?? AFP ?? The Brussels court, left, where Salah Abdesalam, above, goes on trial over a shoot-out with police. It will be the first public glimpse of the man who led police on a four-month internatio­nal hunt
AFP The Brussels court, left, where Salah Abdesalam, above, goes on trial over a shoot-out with police. It will be the first public glimpse of the man who led police on a four-month internatio­nal hunt

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