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Paris court convicts 14 for helping January 2015 terror attacks

A Paris court on Wednesday handed 14 defendants jail sentences ranging from four years to life imprisonment for their part in helping terrorist gunmen in their shooting massacres over three days in January 2015 at the offices of Charlie Hebdo magazine and of hostages at a Jewish supermarket, and the murder of a trainee policewoman, killing a total of 17 people.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

A court in France has convicted 14 people in relation to the January 2015 terror attacks in Paris on the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo and a Jewish supermarket, reports The Guardian.

A total of 17 people were murdered across three days in a series of attacks that horrified the nation. All three assailants were killed in shootouts with the police, leaving only accomplices to face trial.

The defendants were found guilty on different charges, ranging from membership of a criminal network to complicity in the attacks. Terrorism-related charges were dropped for several of the defendants who were found guilty of lesser crimes.

Ali Riza Polat, who was described as a “linchpin” in the organisation of the attacks, was found guilty of complicity by helping the gunmen obtain weapons and ammunition.

The verdicts were announced by Régis de Jorna, the president of the special assize court panel of five judges, after a hearing lasting 54 days that put 11 people in the dock and tried three in their absence.

At 11.30am on January 7th 2015, brothers Chérif and Saïd Kouachi forced their way into the offices of Charlie Hebdo in Paris’s central 11th arrondissement.

They killed nine newspaper staff, as well as a building maintenance worker and a police officer. As they fled to a getaway vehicle, they stopped to kill a second police officer who was lying injured on the pavement. In a chilling scene captured on video, one of the brothers, hooded and dressed in black, strolled up to Ahmed Merabet and shot him at close range. Then they disappeared.

On Thursday January 8th, while a major manhunt continued for the Kouachi brothers, Amédy Coulibaly, 32, who later expressed his allegiance to Islamic State, shot Clarissa Jean-Philippe, a trainee municipal police officer.

On the following day, shortly after the brothers were discovered holed up in a printing works north of Paris, Coulibaly stormed the Hyper Cacher supermarket, killing four Jewish people and taking other staff and shoppers hostage. All three terrorists were killed in shootouts with police in the hours that followed.

De Jorna said Coulibaly had relied on “a circle of trusted individuals”, among them Polat. Sentencing Polat to 30 years in prison, De Jorna described him as a “longstanding friend” of the supermarket gunman.

Polat had played a “particularly active and transversal” role in that circle and had given Coulibaly “logistical help”, De Jorna said. He added the judges believed Polat knew of Coulibaly’s “ideological” jihadist commitment and therefore what he intended to do.

Hayat Boumeddiene, 32, the former partner of Coulibaly, was one of the three suspects tried in absentia. Boumeddiene was found guilty of financing terrorism and belonging to a criminal terrorist network and also sentenced to 30 years. She is thought to be alive and on the run from an international arrest warrant in Syria, where she joined Isis.

Mohamed, 33, and Mehdi Belhoucine, 29, who also left France after the attacks and are thought to have died fighting with Isis in Syria, were also on trial in their absence. Mohamed Belhoucine was convicted of complicity in the attacks sentenced to life in prison.

Three of the remaining accused were found guilty of “association with terrorist criminals” and given sentences ranging from 13 to 20 years. Seven others were convicted of the lesser offence of “associating with criminals”, ruling out their association with terrorism, and sentenced to between four and ten years.

The Charlie Hebdo attack took place on the day of its first weekly editorial meeting of the new year. The paper had moved to its second-floor offices in rue Nicolas Appert after its previous premises was gutted in a firebomb attack in 2011 after a decision to publish controversial Danish cartoons of the prophet Muhammad. The decision to reprint the caricatures – viewed as a defence of free speech by some and a provocation by others – still has repercussions today, seen most recently in the murder of schoolteacher Samuel Paty by an Islamist terrorist in October 2020.

Read more of this report from The Guardian.