The National - News

Brother of killer ends anti-terror trek in Paris

Horrified by atrocities committed by his sibling, he felt compelled to warn others about dangers of religious radicalisa­tion

- Colin Randall Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

Abdelghani Merah reached Paris at the end of an extraordin­ary march against extremism yesterday, exactly five years after his brother Mohamed murdered three children and a teacher at Jewish school to become one of France’s most notorious terrorists. Mr Merah, 40, said he was “tired but content” after a 40day trek aimed at raising awareness not only in Muslim communitie­s but also among the authoritie­s of the “predators who steal the heart and minds of young people”.

As he reached the heart of the capital, he paused to pay homage to victims of terrorism at the Bataclan concert hall, scene of the bloodiest of the attacks that took 130 lives on November 13, 2015.

“It was a very emotional moment for me,” he said. “So many attacks have happened since my brother committed his terrible crimes. “Our communitie­s must rise on their own initiative against those who instil hatred in people, almost with impunity.

“My family name is used in relation to evil terrorist atrocities. I hope my gesture means it can now be used to awaken conscience­s and show that the dangers of radicalisa­tion are much greater even than we believe.”

Mr Merah chose to arrive in Paris on the fifth anniversar­y of the most shocking of his brother’s killings. On March 19, 2012, Mohamed shot dead three Jewish children aged between three and eight, and the father of two of them, at a school in the south-western city of Toulouse.

Days earlier, he had already killed three French soldiers, two of them of North African Muslim origin, in other attacks in Toulouse and the nearby town of Montauban. He was killed in a shoot- out with police on March 22. Although Mohamed Merah had pledged allegiance to Al Qaeda, whose Algerian affiliate Jund Al Khalifa issued two statements admitting responsibi­lity for his killings, his brother believes he acted under the influence of another sibling, Abdelkader, who is now facing trial accused of complicity in the murders.

Supporters of Mr Merah say it is a wonder he became the person he is, implacably opposed to extremism, after growing up in a family where the parents saw the September 11 attacks on the United States as a cause for celebratio­n. It was not lost on Mr Merah that even as he neared his final destinatio­n, a man was killed when apparently about to commit a “lone wolf” attack at Paris’s Orly airport on Saturday morning.

“It feels like almost every day I was on the road, listening to the radio and wondering what the latest terrorist incident would be,” he said.

A heavy bag strapped to his back, modern music from his native Algeria playing in his earphones and one arm limp from a road accident that left him unemployed despite his training as a gardener, Mr Merah covered 1,009 kilometres on a trek that began in the southern port of Marseilles on February 8.

In the earl y stages of his march, he followed the route of the 1983 March of the Beurs, when demonstrat­ors opposing racism and demanding equality also walked to Paris from the south of France.

He made detours to cover places that have experience­d the radicalisa­tion of young Muslims, sometimes leading to terrorist involvemen­t.

In Paris, he was greeted by supporters of La Brigade des Meres, an organisati­on of mothers fighting the spread of extremism among the disenchant­ed offspring of Maghrebin parents. The group, which provided some financial and logistical support during Mr Merah’s march, was founded by Nadia Remadna, a French- Algerian mother who received repeated threats after publishing her book How I Saved My Children.

Its subtitle was especially striking: Once We Feared Our Children Would Be Delinquent­s, Now We Worry They’ll Become Terrorists.

Mr Merah’s gesture was widely acclaimed, especially by those committed to improving community relations and striving to end radicalisa­tion in France’s typically impoverish­ed and consequent­ly resentful Muslim ghettos.

But there was some criticism too.

A ceremony was also held yesterday in front of the school where Mohamed Merah killed the Jewish children.

Speaking to France Info radio, Samuel Sandler, whose son and two grandsons were among the victims of that shooting, said he was shocked not by the initiative but by a choice of arrival date he considered “obscene”. Mr Merah said he understood the anger and sadness of those bereaved by his brother’s actions and shared such sentiments.

He also offered no criticism of France’s justice ministry for making no official available to greet him, as he had hoped, in Paris. “I have come more and more to think of myself as French,” said Mr Merah, who was born in Algeria and has not been able to complete procedures to become a French citizen.

“But I will not even express pride in what I have done,” he said. “It seemed to me the right and necessary thing to do and I am content. I ask for nothing from France in return.”

 ?? Kamil Zihnioglu / AP Photo ?? ‘Our communitie­s must rise … against those who instil hatred in people, almost with impunity,’ says Abdelghani Merah.
Kamil Zihnioglu / AP Photo ‘Our communitie­s must rise … against those who instil hatred in people, almost with impunity,’ says Abdelghani Merah.

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