This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/28/world/europe/salah-abdeslam-paris-attacks-suspect-extradited-to-france.html
The article has changed 9 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 4 | Version 5 |
---|---|
Salah Abdeslam, Suspect in Paris Attacks, Is Extradited to France | Salah Abdeslam, Suspect in Paris Attacks, Is Extradited to France |
(about 3 hours later) | |
PARIS — Salah Abdeslam, thought to be the only direct participant in November’s Paris attacks to have survived, was handed over to France by Belgium on Wednesday, prosecutors in both countries said. | |
He was later charged in a French court with murder connected to terrorism, participation in a terrorist conspiracy and possession of weapons and explosives, the Paris prosecutor’s office announced. | |
Mr. Abdeslam, who is also believed to be connected to the attacks in Brussels last month, was the subject of a European arrest warrant, which simplified the extradition process between the two European Union countries. | |
“Within the framework of the Paris attacks of the 13th of November 2015, Salah Abdeslam has been surrendered to the French authorities this morning,” the Belgian federal prosecutor’s office said in a statement. | |
The Paris prosecutor’s office said in a statement that Mr. Abdeslam arrived in French territory at 9:05 a.m., but it did not specify how or where he was brought to the French authorities from the high-security prison where he had been detained in Beveren, Belgium. | |
The French justice minister, Jean-Jacques Urvoas, said after a cabinet meeting that Mr. Abdeslam would be held in isolation in a prison in the Paris region. | |
Mr. Urvoas said that Mr. Abdeslam would be guarded by a team specializing in detention of “people known to be dangerous.” | |
Mr. Abdeslam is believed to have been part of a team of 10 Islamic State operatives who carried out a series of shootings and suicide bombings in Paris, and in the northern suburb of St.-Denis, on the evening of Nov. 13, killing 130 people and wounding more than 400. | |
Mr. Abdeslam, a 26-year-old French citizen of Moroccan ancestry who lived in Belgium, fled Paris to Brussels in the early hours of Nov. 14. He was the target of a four-month international manhunt before he was arrested on March 18 in the Molenbeek neighborhood of Brussels, his hometown. | Mr. Abdeslam, a 26-year-old French citizen of Moroccan ancestry who lived in Belgium, fled Paris to Brussels in the early hours of Nov. 14. He was the target of a four-month international manhunt before he was arrested on March 18 in the Molenbeek neighborhood of Brussels, his hometown. |
Mr. Abdeslam ran a bar there with his brother Ibrahim, who detonated a suicide vest in the Comptoir Voltaire cafe in central Paris on Nov. 13. | Mr. Abdeslam ran a bar there with his brother Ibrahim, who detonated a suicide vest in the Comptoir Voltaire cafe in central Paris on Nov. 13. |
French and Belgian investigators have found evidence suggesting that Mr. Abdeslam was heavily involved in preparations for the Paris attacks. He rented cars and at least one safe house, bought material used in explosives and drove across Europe to pick up other suspects. | |
But Mr. Abdeslam’s exact role on the night of the attacks is still unclear. Experts have questioned how valuable he will be to investigators in France, though the French authorities and families of the victims have expressed relief that a surviving participant in the attacks will stand trial. | |
He is suspected of driving three suicide bombers to the Stade de France soccer stadium in St.-Denis, and investigators are still trying to establish whether he had intended to carry out another attack. | He is suspected of driving three suicide bombers to the Stade de France soccer stadium in St.-Denis, and investigators are still trying to establish whether he had intended to carry out another attack. |
Shortly after his arrest, Mr. Abdeslam told investigators that he had “backed out” of carrying out a suicide bombing against the Stade de France. | |
A French criminal lawyer, Frank Berton, said on Tuesday after meeting with Mr. Abdeslam in prison that he would defend the suspect in France, and he told the BFM TV news channel on Wednesday that his client “would not remain silent.” | A French criminal lawyer, Frank Berton, said on Tuesday after meeting with Mr. Abdeslam in prison that he would defend the suspect in France, and he told the BFM TV news channel on Wednesday that his client “would not remain silent.” |
Mr. Berton said that Mr. Abdeslam had to be judged “for what he has done and not for what he represents, because he is the last survivor and some would blame him for deeds and actions that are not his.” | Mr. Berton said that Mr. Abdeslam had to be judged “for what he has done and not for what he represents, because he is the last survivor and some would blame him for deeds and actions that are not his.” |
In an interview with the French newspaper Libération, Sven Mary, Mr. Abdeslam’s lawyer in Belgium, was more disparaging, characterizing his client as a “little jerk from Molenbeek” and as a petty criminal who followed rather than led. | |
“He has the intelligence of an empty ashtray,” Mr. Mary said. “I asked him if he had read the Quran, which I have done, and he answered that he had read its interpretation online.” | “He has the intelligence of an empty ashtray,” Mr. Mary said. “I asked him if he had read the Quran, which I have done, and he answered that he had read its interpretation online.” |
Mr. Mary told the newspaper that he had struggled to gain Mr. Abdeslam’s trust, and that it was still unclear to him how Mr. Abdeslam had been radicalized. | Mr. Mary told the newspaper that he had struggled to gain Mr. Abdeslam’s trust, and that it was still unclear to him how Mr. Abdeslam had been radicalized. |
“Just a year and a half ago, he was clubbing in Amsterdam,” Mr. Mary said. “The only explanation that I see is propaganda on the Internet that gives the impression that Muslims are the victims of injustice.” | “Just a year and a half ago, he was clubbing in Amsterdam,” Mr. Mary said. “The only explanation that I see is propaganda on the Internet that gives the impression that Muslims are the victims of injustice.” |
Mr. Abdeslam is also suspected of being connected to the March 22 suicide bombings that killed 32 at Brussels Airport and at a subway station in the Belgian capital. Those attacks were carried out by members of a network that is thought to have also orchestrated the Paris carnage. | |
Mr. Abdeslam, who was arrested just four days before the attacks in Brussels, has denied prior knowledge of the plot, but investigators have established links between him and several of the attackers. | |
Although Mr. Abdeslam initially indicated after his arrest he would fight extradition to France, he switched positions after the attacks in Brussels. | |
Mr. Abdeslam was also charged with attempted murder last week in Belgium, in connection with a shootout between the police and gunmen on March 15 in the Forest section of Brussels that took place three days before his arrest. | |