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Paris attacks suspect refuses to answer questions at Belgian

AFP  |  Brussels 

The only surviving suspect in the 2015 attacks, Salah Abdeslam, refused to answer questions today as he went on trial in over a bloody with police that led to his capture. Tight security surrounded the start of the trial of the 28-year-old, who was transferred overnight from a jail near the French capital and arriving in in a convoy of police vehicles. Abdeslam, who has declined to to speak to investigators since his arrest in March 2016, immediately signalled his defiance on Monday by refusing to stand when asked by the and saying he would not cooperate. "I do not wish to answer any questions," Abdeslam, bearded and wearing a long-sleeved white polo shirt, said when the presiding judge, Marie-Keutgen, asked him to confirm his identity. The told the court that Abdeslam has also refused to have photos or video taken of him during the four-day trial in The Belgian-born French national of Moroccan descent faces charges of attempted terrorist murder of police officers and carrying banned weapons over a gunbattle in the Forest district of on March 15, 2016. Three police officers were wounded and a jihadist was killed in the fight, which came as Abdeslam was on the run four months after the attacks.

He was captured three days later. Abdeslam and the man arrested with him, Tunisian national Sofiane Ayari, 24, could serve up to 40 years in prison if convicted. Hundreds of Belgian security forces turned the Palais de Justice court building in into a virtual fortress while a helicopter with searchlights circled overhead as he arrived. "This must remain an ordinary trial," said the who presides over the court, "If there is the slightest problem I will order the courtroom to be evacuated." The non-jury trial is the prelude to a later one in and prosecutors hope the trial will yield clues not only about the attacks that killed 130 people in but also the suicide bombings months later in Abdeslam has refused point-blank to speak to investigators throughout the nearly two years since his arrest, which capped a four-month hunt for Europe's most wanted man. But he has insisted on attending the trial, where three judges are to lead proceedings for four days, which had raised hopes, now apparently dashed, that he would use it to break his silence. Hennart insisted that the trial would only focus on the shootout, saying: "That is what we will talk about, we will not talk about either the or attacks." The plans for transferring Abdeslam from Fleury-Merogis prison in the Parisian suburbs, and then back to a prison just across the border in every night, were shrouded in secrecy.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, February 05 2018. 14:40 IST
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