A Paris court on Friday convicted nine people of belonging to a terrorist network that trained in Afghanistan and reportedly planned attacks in France, reports ABC News.
The 15-day trial underscored the concerns of French and other European officials over Europeans returning from war zones in Syria — which has attracted more would-be jihadis than Afghanistan.
The court handed down sentences ranging from two to nine years in prison. Three of the defendants were tried in absentia, including Touhami Tebourski, who is in custody in Turkey awaiting extradition to France, and was sentenced to nine years. Two others are at large.
Tebourski is one of four defendants that the prosecution said spent time in the Pakistan-Afghanistan border zone, a haven for al-Qaida and Taliban militia fighters. Two of the four — one arrested in Bulgaria, the other in Italy — were given eight-year prison terms.
All denied they were fighters or had planned an attack.
The court ruled the group had "varying commitments" to a "perfectly organized" network but said there was no "clearly defined" project for attack.
Read more of this Associated Press report published by ABC News.