Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Charlie Hebdo terror suspects go on trial

- Lori Hinnant and Nicolas Vaux-Montagny

PARIS – Thirteen men and a woman went on trial Wednesday in the 2015 attacks against the Charlie Hebdo satirical newspaper and a kosher supermarke­t in Paris that marked the beginning of a wave of violence by the Islamic State group in Europe.

Seventeen people and all three gunmen died during the three days of attacks in January 2015. Later that year, a separate network of French and Belgian fighters for the Islamic State group struck Paris again, this time killing 130 people in attacks at the Bataclan concert hall, the national stadium, and in bars and restaurant­s.

Those on trial in France’s terrorism court are accused of buying weapon and cars and helping with logistics in the January 2015 attacks. Most say they thought they were helping plan an ordinary crime. Three, including the only woman accused, are being tried in absentia after leaving to join Islamic State.

“The trial will establish and confirm that the two attacks were coordinate­d. One was an attack on freedom of expression and the other was against Jews because they were Jews,” Francois Hollande, who was then France’s president, told RTL radio.

The attacks from Jan. 7-9, 2015, started during an editorial meeting at Charlie Hebdo, whose offices had been unmarked and guarded by police since the publicatio­n of caricature­s of the Prophet Muhammad years before. Brothers Cherif and Said Kouachi gunned down 12 people before carjacking a vehicle and fleeing. They claimed the attacks in the name of al-Qaida.

Two days later, on the eve of the Jewish Sabbath, Amedy Coulibaly stormed the Hyper Cacher supermarke­t, killing four hostages and invoking the Islamic State group as the Kouachi brothers took control of a printing office outside the French capital. The attackers died that day during near-simultaneo­us police raids.

It took days more for investigat­ors to realize that Coulibaly was also responsibl­e for the seemingly random death of a young policewoma­n the previous day.

It took further weeks to unravel the network of petty criminals and neighborho­od friends linking the three attackers. By then, Hayat Boumedienn­e, who was married to Coulibaly, had left for Syria with the help of two brothers also charged in the case. Most of the 11 who will appear insist their help in the mass killings was unwitting.

“Since 2012, terrorism capitalize­d on the prevailing delinquenc­y there is around these terrorists,” said Samia Maktouf, a lawyer for one of the attack survivors. “They are not second fiddles, they are full accomplice­s.”

Despite a global outpouring of support, the attacks were also seen as a massive intelligen­ce failure. French authoritie­s ended a phone tap on one of the Kouachi brothers a few months before they stormed the editorial offices.

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