The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Paris trial begins in case of terrorist attacks from 2015

- C.2020 The New York Times

PARIS — France began revisiting one of the worst chapters in its modern history Wednesday, as a landmark trial opened in Paris for the January 2015 terrorist attacks that killed 17 people in and around the French capital.

Over at least the next two months, before the glare of the world’s media and under tight security, the court is expected to meticulous­ly examine three harrowing days that traumatize­d France 5½ years ago, starting with a daytime assault on the offices of Charlie Hebdo, a satirical magazine that Islamic extremists targeted after it published cartoons lampooning Islam.

The killings were followed by a string of deadly jihadi attacks, culminatin­g with assaults in November that year in and around Paris that killed 130 people, vaulting France into a yearslong state of emergency.

Saïd and Chérif Kouachi, the two brothers who carried out the Charlie Hebdo attack, died in a shootout with the police north of Paris two days later.

A third attacker, Amédy Coulibaly, killed a police officer in a Parisian suburb and four Jewish hostages at a kosher supermarke­t before dying himself when the police stormed the building.

With all the central assailants dead, the current trial will be more cathartic than revelatory for a country forced by the events to reckon with the threat of homegrown terrorism, permanentl­y altering its balance between security and civil liberty.

Those on trial, who range in age from 29 to 68, are charged with providing logistical aid to the assailants, by carrying or supplying cash, weapons and vehicles. Most of the accused are facing up to 20 years in prison.

The court is expected to hear testimony from some 150 witnesses, and, exceptiona­lly, the proceeding­s will be filmed for posterity.

But as the trial closes one chapter, it will open another: In the years to come, several major terrorism cases are expected to come to trial, especially over the November 2015 attacks in Paris and one in Nice in July 2016, with a record number of defendants and plaintiffs — and often without the perpetrato­rs.

Thirteen men and one woman stand accused in the trial, which was postponed from the spring because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

 ?? FRANCOIS MORI / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chloe Verlhac, widow of Charlie Hebdo cartoonist Tignous, arrives at the courtroom for the start of a trial for those charged in the January 2015 terrorist attacks that killed 17.
FRANCOIS MORI / ASSOCIATED PRESS Chloe Verlhac, widow of Charlie Hebdo cartoonist Tignous, arrives at the courtroom for the start of a trial for those charged in the January 2015 terrorist attacks that killed 17.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States