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4 men in Paris court are 1st to face terror attacks charges

The Columbian
Published: January 19, 2015, 4:00pm
2 Photos
Prosecutor Yvon Calvet, right, and a top police official in Montpellier, Gilles Souliers, address the media during a press conference held at the court house in Beziers, southern France on Tuesday.
Prosecutor Yvon Calvet, right, and a top police official in Montpellier, Gilles Souliers, address the media during a press conference held at the court house in Beziers, southern France on Tuesday. Photo Gallery

PARIS — French anti-terror prosecutors were seeking to charge four men Tuesday in connection with the attacks in Paris that killed 20 people, which would make them the first suspects charged in the country’s bloodiest terrorism in decades.

The four men remained in court late Tuesday awaiting an anti-terror judge’s decision on whether to open preliminary investigations against them.

The possible charges were expected just hours before the French government was to unveil new measures aimed at helping head off future attacks, giving police more power to tap phones, monitor websites and force Internet companies to block messages of hate posted online.

Prime minister Manuel Valls will present new security measures Wednesday that will include efforts to increase intelligence-gathering against jihadis and other radicals, block their activities on the Internet, and prevent them from collaborating inside prisons or traveling abroad to fight, President Francois Hollande said.

France is on high security alert after the country’s worst terrorist attacks in decades. The court case and the arrests came as Valls urged his nation to do some soul-searching about the country’s deep ethnic divisions and declared that fighting hatred, anti-Semitism and racism was a top priority, especially in France’s impoverished housing projects.

The Paris prosecutor’s office said the four men in court Tuesday were suspected of providing logistical support to Amedy Coulibaly, one of the terrorists killed by police, and requested they be detained longer on weapons and terrorism charges.

Coulibaly shot a police officer to death on the outskirts of Paris and then killed four hostages inside a kosher supermarket before being shot dead by police. It is not clear whether the four suspects, all in their 20s, were involved in plotting the attacks or even aware of Coulibaly’s plans.

Five others arrested in the investigation were released without charge, prosecutors said.

No one has been charged with direct involvement in the Jan. 7-9 Paris terror attacks. Coulibaly claimed allegiance to the Islamic State group while the two Kouachi brothers who massacred 12 people at the Charlie Hebdo satirical weekly said they were backed by al-Qaida in Yemen.

In Bulgaria, a court agreed Tuesday to extradite a Frenchman who knew one of the Kouachis. Fritz-Joly Joachin told the Bulgarian court he was innocent and wanted to return to Paris to clear his name.

Five others arrested in the investigation of the terror attacks in France were released without charge, prosecutors said.

Meanwhile, France honored a Mali-born employee of the kosher market who saved lives there by granting him citizenship.

Lassana Bathily, 24, was in the store’s underground stockroom when Coulibaly burst in upstairs and killed four people. He turned off the freezer and hid a group of shoppers inside, then sneaked out to speak to police and help the operation to free the 15 hostages and kill the attacker.

Bathily has lived in France since 2006. He had applied for French citizenship last year.

Valls told journalists Tuesday that the attacks should force France to look at the “apartheid” within. The conservative Socialist whose hard line on Islamic extremism has won many fans said he wasn’t making excuses for crime or terrorism, “but we also have to look at the reality of our country.”

Valls said memories have dimmed of the three weeks of riots by disaffected youths that shook France in 2005.

“And yet, the stigmas remain … a territorial, social and ethnic apartheid that has imposed itself on our country,” he said.

In response to the 2005 riots, the French government spent hundreds of millions of euros to improve conditions in its rundown suburbs, with little success. Unemployment among young people in the housing projects is well above the national average and state buildings are often targeted for vandalism and arson.

“The fight against hatred, anti-Semitism in all its forms, racism — these fights are absolutely urgent,” Valls said. Young people who refused to take part in a national minute of silence for the terror attack victims “are symptoms of something that is not going well.”

French authorities also arrested five ethnic Chechens from Russia in Tuesday raids in southern France, including one whom a mayor said was found with a cache of explosives. French authorities said the men had no established links to terrorism but did have ties to other crimes.

In Athens, an Algerian man suspected of jihadi terrorist links in Belgium appeared before a Greek prosecutor for an extradition hearing on being sent to Belgium. The suspect, whose name was not released, was detained Saturday in Athens, where he lives.

Belgium launched a large anti-terrorism sweep last week, during which two suspects were killed and one wounded, that netted several returnees from Islamic holy war in Syria.

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