Paris attacks trial: the 20 suspects

Paris attacks trial: the 20 suspects

The verdicts are due early evening on Wednesday
The verdicts are due early evening on Wednesday. Photo: Alain JOCARD / AFP/File
Source: AFP

PAY ATTENTION: Click “See First” under the “Following” tab to see YEN.com.gh News on your News Feed!

A total of 20 people have been tried over the November 2015 attacks by the Islamic State group on the Bataclan concert hall and other targets around Paris, with the verdicts expected on Wednesday.

Only 14 of them have appeared in person, with the rest missing or presumed to be dead.

Salah Abdeslam, aged 32

Once a pot-smoking party-lover who grew up in the impoverished Molenbeek district of Brussels, Abdeslam turned to radical Islam along with his brother Brahim, who blew himself up in a bar during the Paris attacks.

Salah Abdeslam says he backed out of his mission to blow himself up in a bar -- but prosecutors say his suicide belt was simply defective
Salah Abdeslam says he backed out of his mission to blow himself up in a bar -- but prosecutors say his suicide belt was simply defective. Photo: DSK / POLICE NATIONALE/AFP/File
Source: AFP

PAY ATTENTION: Enjoy reading our stories? Join YEN.com.gh's Telegram channel for more!

The only surviving attacker gave his profession as an "Islamic State fighter" and recounted religious verses in his first appearance in court in September, but his provocative early behaviour has faded from view.

Read also

Paris court to issue verdicts after marathon 2015 attacks trial

He broke down in tears in April and apologised to victims, asking them to "hate me with moderation."

He has defended himself by saying he never killed anyone after alleging he backed out of his mission to blow himself up in a bar.

Prosecutors say his suicide belt was simply defective.

He went on the run for four months after the attacks and was involved in a shootout with police in Brussels, for which he has already been sentenced to 20 years in prison.

French prosecutors have requested a full life sentence.

His former lawyer in Belgium once described him as having "the intelligence of an empty ashtray".

Mohamed Abrini, aged 37

A childhood friend of Abdeslam and other jihadists from Molenbeek, Abrini is a school dropout and multi-convicted thief who turned to Islamic State's ideology after his radicalised younger brother joined the group and was killed in Syria.

Read also

Ex-Red Brigades member exiled in France says 'will not die' in Italian jail

Mohamed Abrini told the court during the trial that 'it's a duty for all Muslims to go to do jihad'
Mohamed Abrini told the court during the trial that 'it's a duty for all Muslims to go to do jihad'. Photo: HO / BELGIAN FEDERAL POLICE/AFP/File
Source: AFP

"It's a duty for all Muslims to go to do jihad," he told the court in January, justifying the attacks in Paris as a response to Western bombing against Islamic State and its now-defunct caliphate in Iraq and Syria.

At the end of the trial on Monday, the one-time bakery worker known as "brioche" to friends said it had enabled him "to put faces to the victims".

"I'm aware that what happened is disgusting."

The Belgian claimed that he backed out of the Paris attacks at the last moment, but has admitted meeting the ringleader beforehand and booking cars and safe-houses for the other jihadists.

He took part in separate suicide bombings that struck Brussels in 2016, though he decided not to detonate himself.

Prosecutors asked for a life sentence with 22 years as a minimum term.

Osama Krayem, 29, and Sofian Ayari, 28

A Swede of Syrian and Palestinian origin, Krayem allegedly fled Paris with Abdeslam after the attacks.

Read also

Former Nazi camp guard, 101, faces German court verdict

Osama Krayem, depicted here at the start of the trial
Osama Krayem, depicted here at the start of the trial. Photo: Benoit PEYRUCQ / AFP/File
Source: AFP

The long-haired jihadist was identified in a notorious IS video showing a Jordanian pilot being burned alive in a cage, thanks to a scar on his eyebrow.

He remained silent for the trial, giving a written statement in January which read: "At the start I thought I would express myself. Then, I saw how the hearings were going and I lost all hope."

He is suspected of planning another attack at Amsterdam's airport along with Ayari, a Tunisian who travelled to Syria to join Islamic State.

Ayari, who was arrested along with Abdeslam, began to explain his past with IS after being "touched" by the testimony of a victim's mother in February, but then refused to answer any more questions.

Prosecutors sought life terms for them.

Mohamed Bakkali, 35

Arrested two weeks after the Paris bloodbath, the Belgian-Moroccan national is suspected of providing logistical help such as hiring safe houses and cars, providing fake identity papers and helping repatriate IS fighters from Syria.

Read also

Judges retire to consider verdicts in Paris attack trials

He was already sentenced to 25 years in prison in Belgium over his role in an attack on a high-speed Paris-bound train that left two passengers injured.

He was handed over to French authorities on the condition that he returned to serve his sentence in Belgium.

He offered apologies to victims on Monday, the last day of hearings.

Muhammed Usman, 29, and Adel Haddidi, 34

Usman from Pakistan and Haddidi from Algeria were arrested in Greece as they travelled with two jihadists who went on to blow themselves up outside the national sports stadium in Paris.

The pair were attempting to disguise themselves as refugees in the mass of people heading from Syria to Europe via Turkey and intended to take part in the attacks on Paris, prosecutors said.

"I'm working on myself. In the future I would like to do something good with my life," Haddidi said in his final statement.

Read also

The difficult search for truth at France's biggest terror trial

Yassine Atar, 35

He is the younger brother of the man presumed to have overseen the whole operation in Syria: Oussama Atar, a veteran jihadist.

Prosecutors detailed his meetings with key suspects and his family links to the Islamic State cell in Brussels, as well as how a key to a hideout was found at his home.

"I hope you've understood that I have absolutely nothing to do with Oussama Atar and nothing to do with these attacks which I condemn firmly," he said in his final statement.

The court heard earlier how Belgian authorities had granted a passport to his older brother in 2013 despite his known links to radical Islamism -- a possible attempt to recruit him as an informer.

The older Atar is also on trial but is presumed dead in Syria or Iraq.

The 'friends'

Five friends and acquaintances of Abdeslam and Abrini are on trial, charged over assistance they gave to the main suspects.

Read also

Murdered rapper's song pulled from YouTube in India

Mohammed Amri, 33, Hamza Attou, 28, and Ali Oulkadi, 37, went to fetch Abdeslam from Paris in the aftermath of the attacks, but denied knowing about his involvement.

Haddad Asufi, 36, and Abdellah Chouaa, 41, were tried for alleged help they gave to Bakkali and Abrini.

Others

Ali El Haddad Asufi, 36: a Belgian-Moroccan suspected of supplying weapons.

Farid Kharkhach, 39: a Belgian-Moroccan suspected of supplying fake identity papers.

Ahmad Alkhald, age unknown: also known as Omar Darif, a Syrian, presumed dead, accused of making the suicide belts.

Jean-Michel and Fabien Clain, 38 and 41: notorious jihadist brothers from southwest France who featured in an IS video claiming responsibility for the attacks. Presumed dead in Syria.

Ahmed Dahmani, 33: a friend of Abdeslam wanted for providing logistical help. In jail in Turkey.

Obeida Aref Dibo, age unknown: a Syrian IS member, presumed dead, thought to have been a planner.

PAY ATTENTION: check out news exactly for YOU ➡️ find "Recommended for you" block and enjoy!

Source: AFP

Authors:
AFP avatar

AFP AFP text, photo, graphic, audio or video material shall not be published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcast or publication or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium. AFP news material may not be stored in whole or in part in a computer or otherwise except for personal and non-commercial use. AFP will not be held liable for any delays, inaccuracies, errors or omissions in any AFP news material or in transmission or delivery of all or any part thereof or for any damages whatsoever. As a newswire service, AFP does not obtain releases from subjects, individuals, groups or entities contained in its photographs, videos, graphics or quoted in its texts. Further, no clearance is obtained from the owners of any trademarks or copyrighted materials whose marks and materials are included in AFP material. Therefore you will be solely responsible for obtaining any and all necessary releases from whatever individuals and/or entities necessary for any uses of AFP material.