National Post

Dead ly Itinerary

Days at wheel, months of planning for Paris attack fugitive

- By Lori Hinnant in Paris

At the height of Europe’s vacation season, a young man with French and Belgian IDs caught a ferry from southern Italy to Greece. He and a companion returned to Italy four days later, then hit the road for France. The beginning of August marked the first known steps in a mission that criss-crossed Europe to lay the groundwork for the Paris attacks.

Over the next three months, authoritie­s believe Salah Abdeslam drove thousands of kilometres across Europe’s open borders to buy gear, rent cars, book rooms, scout locations and move people into place for the Nov. 13 carnage that killed 130 people and wounded hundreds.

His itinerary, pieced together by The Associated Press, shows the crucial role he played and how extensivel­y the attackers planned the assault, which brought together three teams of suicide bombers and gunmen largely bound by common language, blood ties, childhood friendship­s, delinquenc­y and alienation.

Of the 10 dead attackers and accomplice­s, three remain unidentifi­ed, their DNA yielding no matches in any criminal database. Two more attackers, including Abdeslam, are still on the run.

CRISSCROSS­ING EUROPE

In early September, a month after he travelled the length of Italy on his way home to Belgium, Abdeslam was back on the road.

He took a rental car twice in September to Budapest, 1,400 km to the east, according to Belgium’s federal prosecutor. At the train station in Budapest, he picked up two men. Hungarian authoritie­s say the men were among the thousands of refugees travelling up through the Balkans, but that the two refused to register their asylum claims.

On Sept. 9, he was stopped at a checkpoint on the Austrian border in a rental Mercedes, accompanie­d by two people with Belgian ID cards that later turned out to be fake. He was waved on through.

A month later, far to the south in Greece, two more men with Syrian passports joined the throngs of migrants passing through. Weeks later, these two men would blow themselves up in Paris.

As the two future suicide attackers travelled north, Abdeslam journeyed from his base in Brussels to the Paris suburbs to buy detonators from a store that specialize­s in fireworks, said a French intelligen­ce official, who like most authoritie­s linked to the investigat­ion spoke only on condition of anonymity.

Under his own name, Abdeslam rented the suburban Paris rooms that would be the departure points for the attack teams. Two attackers would drive in from Bobigny in the north, and one from Alfortvill­e in the south.

Abdeslam sometimes had help from his older brother, Brahim, notorious among his friends for his daily routine of hashish and betting on cards.

On Nov. 11, Salah Abdeslam and a small- time criminal, Mohamed Abrini, pulled into a gas station north of Paris in their newly rented Renault Clio, perhaps for a final reconnaiss­ance mission. At about 3 a. m. on Nov. 12, the two were again in the car together, according to the Paris prosecutor. That’s the last time Abrini, whose brother died in Syria in 2014, was spotted. He and Salah are the lone fugitives linked to the attacks.

TIES OF BLOOD AND CRIME

All the attackers and accomplice­s so far identified were raised in Europe, native French speakers with roots in the marginaliz­ed immigrant communitie­s of France and Belgium, such as Molenbeek or Saint- Denis. Minor players — like the man who rented a room to the attacks’ organizer, Abdelhamid Abaaoud — have a degree or two of separation in an underworld of drugs, fraud and theft.

Brahim Abdeslam had put a conviction for stealing ID cards behind him and opened a café, appearing “to be on the right road,” said his lawyer, Olivier Martins. But less than two weeks before the attacks, the café was shut down over concerns that drugs were being sold there.

The Abdeslam brothers were close to Abaaoud, another Molenbeek resident who turned to jihad after a series of conviction­s for low-level crime.

Abaaoud’s younger cousin, Hasna Ait Boulhacen, was herself caught up in the underworld. She was the target of a drug- traffickin­g investigat­ion in France that failed to reveal her ties to Abaaoud, a man considered to be among Europe’s most dangerous fugitives even before the Nov. 13 attacks. It was to Ait Boulhacen he turned to for shelter as the attackers he directed transforme­d Paris into a city of chaos.

Ait Boulhacen, 26, took to wearing the face veil this year after a troubled youth of alcohol and violence, according to neighbours.

The Bataclan team was made up of two Frenchmen who left for Syria in 2013, Ismael Omar Mostefai and Samy Amimour, whose father himself went to Syria to try to persuade him to come home, and a third unidentifi­ed attacker.

The squad of suicide bombers at the Stade de France included the youngest of the attackers, Bilal Hadfi, 20, and the two others who entered Europe through Greece, with apparently forged passports.

The team of three men that attacked bars and restaurant­s included Abaaoud, an explosives- rigged Brahim Abdeslam and another unidentifi­ed man. Salah Abdeslam, who is also believed to have been wearing an explosives vest, may have dropped off the bombers at the stadium before heading into Paris.

THE AFTERMATH

Abaaoud’s phone signals indicate he ditched his car in the eastern outskirts of Paris and returned by subway to the city centre.

Salah Abdeslam parked one of the rentals in Paris’ northern 18th arrondisse­ment, bought a SIM card and phoned two friends in Brussels, asking them to drive through the night to fetch him. An explosives vest believed to be his was found discarded in the trash. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’s claim of responsibi­lity specified not just attacks on the stadium, Bataclan and bars and restaurant­s, but also one in the 18th arrondisse­ment that never happened.

Ait Boulhacen, meanwhile, had received a tense call from her cousin. He needed a place to stay. Fast. She contacted her drug dealer. Here, the world of Islamic extremism and petty crime intersecte­d once more. Ait Boulhacen’s contact called Jawad Bendaoud, a street thug convicted in the accidental killing of his best friend over a stolen cellphone.

On Nov. 17, someone using the same fake ID as Salah’s travelling companion back in September wired 750 euros to Ait Boulhacen from Brussels. The cousins reunited on a deserted industrial road, then made their way to an apartment building in Saint-Denis, a stone’s throw from the stadium. As day broke, they were killed in a hail of gunfire. Bendaoud was arrested, protesting as he was led away on live television that he was just “doing a favour.”

Ait Boulhacen’s mother gave a terse comment to The Associated Press: “Hasna is dead. That’s all I have to say.’ ”

As for Salah, he was on the road again.

 ?? EMANUEL DUNAND / AFP / Gett
y Imag
es ?? The Abdeslam family’s apartment in Brussels’ Molenbeek district. Two brothers from the Abdeslam family are linked to the Nov. 13 terror attacks in Paris.
EMANUEL DUNAND / AFP / Gett y Imag es The Abdeslam family’s apartment in Brussels’ Molenbeek district. Two brothers from the Abdeslam family are linked to the Nov. 13 terror attacks in Paris.
 ?? Belgian Federal Police via the asociated press ?? Terror suspect Salah Abdeslam
Belgian Federal Police via the asociated press Terror suspect Salah Abdeslam

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