Belgium will be on high alert on Monday as the last surviving suspect in the 2015 Paris attacks, Salah Abdeslam, stands trial in Brussels over a shootout that led to his capture.

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Paris attacks suspect tried in Belgium over shootout

February 05, 2018 - 10:30

Belgium will be on high alert on Monday as the last surviving suspect in the 2015 Paris attacks, Salah Abdeslam, stands trial in Brussels over a shootout that led to his capture.

One of the most complex parts of Salah Abdeslam’s trial will be his daily arrival and departure at the court. - AFP/VNA Photo
Viet Nam News

BRUSSELS — Belgium will be on high alert on Monday as the last surviving suspect in the 2015 Paris attacks, Salah Abdeslam, stands trial in Brussels over a shootout that led to his capture.

Elite forces will guard the 28-year-old’s transfer from a jail near the French capital to the trial, while hundreds of Belgian security forces will protect the court building.

Abdeslam, a Belgian-born French national of Moroccan descent, is charged with "attempting to murder several police officers in a terrorist context" and of "carrying prohibited weapons in a terrorist context".

The charges concern a gunbattle in the Belgian capital on March 15, 2016, four months after the Paris attacks, which led to his capture days later. Three police officers were wounded and a fellow jihadist was killed.

Abdeslam and the man arrested with him, Tunisian national Sofiane Ayari, 24, could serve up to 40 years in prison if convicted.

The trial is the prelude to a later one in France and prosecutors hope the Brussels trial will yield clues not only about the attacks that killed 130 people in Paris but also the suicide bombings months later in Brussels.

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 Brussels trial, which is expected to last four days, raising the question of whether he will use it to break his silence.

Belgium’s federal prosecutor Frederic Van Leeuw said "it is important for the victims" that the trial yield clues behind the two attacks.

Massive security

Tight secrecy surrounds the plans for transferring Abdeslam from Paris to the Palais de Justice in Brussels, and then back to a prison just across the border in northern France every night.

French and Belgian forces will take joint responsibility for escorting the defendant from France’s Vendin-le-Vieil prison. He will be taken either by road or by helicopter but a decision will not be made until the last moment.

Security forces are leaving no scenario to chance -- escape bids, suicide attempts and even another attack -- for the first public appearance of the boyish former bar owner.

In Brussels, police will have to guard a building with a surface area greater than that of Saint Peter’s Basilica in Rome.

Investigators believe Abdeslam’s capture caused members of his jihadist cell to bring forward plans for the attacks in Brussels.

Suicide attacks on March 22, 2016, killed 32 people at Brussels airport and a metro station near the EU headquarters.

The same cell is believed to have been behind both the Paris and Brussels attacks, which were claimed by the Islamic State group.

Abdeslam has spent nearly 20 months in isolation under 24-hour video surveillance at Fleury-Merogis prison near Paris, after being transferred to France after his arrest. — AFP

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