Zürcher Nachrichten - 'I didn't kill anyone,' Paris terror attacker claims

EUR -
AED 4.081604
AFN 79.563642
ALL 99.812145
AMD 434.84896
ANG 1.989345
AOA 1013.447867
ARS 1193.383186
AUD 1.744564
AWG 2.003004
AZN 1.890005
BAM 1.966501
BBD 2.243423
BDT 135.004588
BGN 1.958869
BHD 0.418844
BIF 3301.942553
BMD 1.111237
BND 1.484658
BOB 7.677951
BRL 6.22326
BSD 1.111106
BTN 94.848677
BWP 15.3769
BYN 3.636101
BYR 21780.242308
BZD 2.231863
CAD 1.559882
CDF 3190.361307
CHF 0.950999
CLF 0.027527
CLP 1056.44229
CNY 8.07658
CNH 8.091666
COP 4604.554359
CRC 559.82541
CUC 1.111237
CUP 29.447777
CVE 110.871305
CZK 25.010637
DJF 197.875381
DKK 7.461944
DOP 70.170787
DZD 147.60784
EGP 56.210775
ERN 16.668553
ETB 146.27175
FJD 2.586792
FKP 0.85645
GBP 0.844662
GEL 3.066512
GGP 0.85645
GHS 17.222949
GIP 0.85645
GMD 80.206966
GNF 9613.066565
GTQ 8.555771
GYD 233.136742
HKD 8.641418
HNL 28.44534
HRK 7.536075
HTG 144.440847
HUF 408.670727
IDR 18576.176581
ILS 4.116005
IMP 0.85645
INR 94.958525
IQD 1453.289909
IRR 46783.26768
ISK 147.134182
JEP 0.85645
JMD 173.141401
JOD 0.787902
JPY 161.59107
KES 143.60963
KGS 96.332741
KHR 4444.695067
KMF 503.003747
KPW 1000.173219
KRW 1624.972291
KWD 0.342621
KYD 0.924089
KZT 558.781461
LAK 24078.816851
LBP 99526.686795
LKR 327.274549
LRD 222.238875
LSL 20.849966
LTL 3.281194
LVL 0.672176
LYD 5.367498
MAD 10.655682
MDL 19.85994
MGA 5126.081933
MKD 63.207503
MMK 2332.990606
MNT 3882.0596
MOP 8.908036
MRU 44.233281
MUR 50.85395
MVR 17.159667
MWK 1926.928267
MXN 22.139739
MYR 4.949173
MZN 70.995904
NAD 20.849966
NGN 1705.914714
NIO 40.889655
NOK 11.429291
NPR 152.004858
NZD 1.903422
OMR 0.427798
PAB 1.111237
PEN 4.082878
PGK 4.540479
PHP 63.438506
PKR 311.277822
PLN 4.262878
PYG 8858.497684
QAR 4.045257
RON 5.089707
RSD 119.812316
RUB 93.613392
RWF 1578.542655
SAR 4.167114
SBD 9.44502
SCR 16.073363
SDG 666.707488
SEK 10.767296
SGD 1.4913
SHP 0.873258
SLE 25.369982
SLL 23302.082381
SOS 633.960021
SRD 40.69424
STD 23000.359268
SVC 9.723545
SYP 14449.081086
SZL 20.849966
THB 37.903158
TJS 12.119875
TMT 3.886702
TND 3.437646
TOP 2.676533
TRY 42.175555
TTD 7.514151
TWD 36.807417
TZS 2940.966644
UAH 45.92151
UGX 4051.406185
USD 1.111237
UYU 46.943979
UZS 14380.794818
VES 77.573106
VND 28524.127159
VUV 137.314864
WST 3.147948
XAF 670.671663
XAG 0.034304
XAU 0.000356
XCD 3.008443
XDR 0.836646
XOF 670.671663
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.259356
ZAR 20.840027
ZMK 10002.46437
ZMW 31.152221
ZWL 357.817813
  • CMSC

    -0.2620

    22.238

    -1.18%

  • JRI

    -0.1400

    12.9

    -1.09%

  • NGG

    3.6500

    69.43

    +5.26%

  • BTI

    1.5450

    41.795

    +3.7%

  • RIO

    -0.6800

    59.22

    -1.15%

  • SCS

    -0.5550

    10.905

    -5.09%

  • BCC

    -6.0750

    95.995

    -6.33%

  • AZN

    2.6200

    74.84

    +3.5%

  • BCE

    0.4850

    22.305

    +2.17%

  • GSK

    1.1450

    38.785

    +2.95%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    9.8

    +0.2%

  • RBGPF

    -0.2800

    67.72

    -0.41%

  • BP

    -2.2600

    31.55

    -7.16%

  • CMSD

    -0.2490

    22.581

    -1.1%

  • RELX

    0.7500

    51.73

    +1.45%

  • VOD

    0.2750

    9.395

    +2.93%

'I didn't kill anyone,' Paris terror attacker claims
'I didn't kill anyone,' Paris terror attacker claims

'I didn't kill anyone,' Paris terror attacker claims

The only assailant still alive after the terror attacks that rocked Paris in November 2015 said Wednesday that "I didn't kill anyone, I didn't hurt anyone" as he took the stand for the first time in the trial over the jihadist massacres.

Text size:

"I didn't cause even a scratch," Salah Abdeslam told the court in a sudden outburst before he was to be questioned over the worst peacetime atrocity carried out on French soil, which saw 130 people killed.

Abdeslam, 32, reiterated his claim of being a member of the Islamic State group, but said the court was making a mistake in wanting to "make an example" of him by inflicting a potential life sentence.

He sought to distance himself from the team of assassins who were all killed in the wake of the attacks, appearing to imply that he had had a last minute change of mind.

"In the future, when someone gets in a metro or a bus with a suitcase stuffed with 50 kilogrammes of explosives, and at the last minute decides 'I'm not doing this,' he will know that he can't, because otherwise he will be locked away or killed," he said.

Abdeslam has so far largely refused to answer investigators' questions since his March 2016 arrest in Belgium, where police found him after months of searching for the men behind the massacres.

But he has claimed he discarded his suicide vest and fled the French capital in the chaotic aftermath of the bloodshed, eluding an intense manhunt to return to Molenbeek, the Brussels district where he grew up.

- Trial enters new phase -

The questioning that begins Wednesday will focus initially on Abdeslam's background and events before the attacks. Prosecutors have already established that he spent much of his youth as a pot-smoking fan of nightclubs and casinos.

But they are seeking information on his brother Brahim, who travelled to Syria in early 2015 and detonated his suicide belt in a bar during the Friday night attack in Paris; and on Abdelhamid Abaaoud, the alleged ringleader who was killed by police a few days later.

Abdeslam's mother, sister and ex-fiancee had also been scheduled to take the stand on Wednesday, but the presiding judge informed the court that they would not be coming, without giving further details.

Abdeslam has been unrepentant so far in court

In one of a series of outbursts, he said that France "knew the risks" of attacking jihadist targets in Syria as part of a coalition fighting the Islamic State group.

After four months of proceedings, the trial -- the biggest in modern French history, attended by hundreds of plaintiffs and victims' relatives -- has entered a new phase in which the 14 suspects present are to be questioned.

So far two of Abdeslam's co-defendants have invoked their right to silence.

- 'Incomprehension' -

"When I look at him, it's just a feeling of incomprehension. How could he do what he did, what they did?" Philippe Duperron, whose son was killed when the gunmen stormed the Bataclan concert hall, told France 2 television on Wednesday.

"What could explain it? But once again, I think this trial will end without us being able to understand," said Duperron, who is president of the 13onze15 Fraternite-Verite victims' association ("November 13, 2015, Brotherhood and Truth").

The horror was unleashed on a Friday night when the first attackers detonated suicide belts outside the Stade de France stadium where France was playing a football match against Germany.

A group of gunmen later opened fire from a car on half a dozen restaurants, and Abdeslam's brother Brahim blew himself up in a bar.

And at the Bataclan, 90 people were massacred by other attackers as they watched a rock concert.

The trial, which is expected to last nine months, sees 20 defendants, including Abdeslam, facing sentences of up to life in prison. Six of the suspects are being tried in absentia.

P.Gashi--NZN