Belgium begins trial of terror cell linked to Paris, Brussels attacks

The men were arrested after deadly raid in a Belgian town in Jan 2015 which exposed a plan to kill police officers


May 09, 2016
Lawyer Sebastien Courtoy talks to the press at the start of the case against the extremist cell from Verviers, at the Brussels correctional court, on May 9, 2016. PHOTO: AFP

BRUSSELS: Belgium on Monday began the trial of seven alleged extremists accused of links to the terror cell behind the Paris and Brussels attacks.

The men were arrested after a deadly raid in the Belgian town of Verviers in January 2015 which exposed an alleged plan to kill police officers. A further nine people who are still at large are being tried in their absence by the court in Brussels.

Police believe Abdelhamid Abaaoud, the suspected ringleader of November's Paris attacks, was giving orders to the Verviers cell by phone from Greece.

Abaaoud, who was killed in a shootout in Paris days after the attacks, also had close links to the cell behind the March 22 Brussels airport and metro attacks.

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French President Francois Hollande has said the same terror cell was behind the Paris massacre, in which gunmen and suicide bombers killed 130 people, and the Brussels attacks in which 32 people died.

Both attacks have been claimed by the Islamic State extremist group. "The theory in which Verviers is at the heart of the Paris attacks" is among those being probed by French legal authorities, a source close to the investigation told the French newspaper Le Monde.

The main suspect at the trial of the Verviers cell is Marouane El Bali, who is accused of attempted murder for firing at police during the gunfight, during which two suspected extremists were killed.

He denies the charges. "He was a small player and was absolutely not aware of any planned attacks," his lawyer Sebastien Courtoy told Belga news agency.

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Belgian police said at the time the cell was planning to kill and kidnap police officers under orders from Islamic State.

Killed in the raid were Sofiane Amghar and Khalid Ben Larbi who went to Syria to join Islamic State in April 2014. The two then slipped back into Belgium to the Verviers hideout which is about 120 kilometres (75 miles) east of Brussels.

The raid on Verviers also occurred just two weeks after a set of extremist attacks in Paris against the Charlie Hebdo satirical newspaper and a Jewish supermarket that left 17 people dead.

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