Paris attacks suspect refuses to speak in court appearance

Salah Abdeslam upset at being kept under constant watch in prison cell, says lawyer

A  special forces officer secures the street outside the courthouse after the appearance of Paris attacks suspect Salah Abdeslam before judges in Paris. Photograph: Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters
A special forces officer secures the street outside the courthouse after the appearance of Paris attacks suspect Salah Abdeslam before judges in Paris. Photograph: Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters

The man prosecutors believe is the sole survivor of the Islamist group that attacked Paris last November appeared before a French investigating judge on Friday, but refused to say anything about the assault in which 130 people were killed.

Salah Abdeslam, a French national born to Moroccan-born parents in Belgium and raised there, was brought under heavily armed escort to a court in central Paris from his solitary-confinement cell in a high-security prison outside the capital. But what was supposed to be the first proper interrogation of the 26-year-old since he was helicoptered to France from Belgium in late April was cut short after he refused to talk.

Frank Berton, his lawyer, said Abdeslam, who was captured in Brussels and extradited to France, was upset about being kept under day-and-night watch inside his cell at Fleury-Merogis prison, south of Paris.

“What I can say is he’s particularly upset by the camera surveillance in his cell, something that is illegal under the law as it stands,” Mr Berton told reporters. “He can’t handle being watched 24 hours a day and that’s causing a problem psychologically I believe.”

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Unexpected

Abdeslam’s refusal to speak was unexpected as Mr Berton had said last month he was ready to speak after transfer to France, where he was officially placed under investigation on April 27th on counts of suspected terrorism and murder.

Abdeslam is believed to be the sole survivor of the November 13th attack by Islamist gunmen and suicide bombers, including his brother, for which the Islamic State militant group that controls large parts of Syria and Iraq claimed responsibility.

Investigators suspect him at least of having played a logistics role in the assault on Stade de France, several cafes and the Bataclan concert hall, where 90 rock fans died.

Abdeslam was Europe’s most wanted fugitive until his capture in Brussels on March 18th after a four-month manhunt. He had fled France by car on the night of the attacks, passing through road police checks before his name was circulated as a suspect.

Lawyers representing victims of an attack in which hundreds were also injured voiced frustration but not surprise. “This just proves he’s somebody who’ll never co-operate with the justice system. We never did and never will trust him,” said lawyer Samia Maktouf.

Reuters