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Brussels shooting suspect to fight French handover to Belgium

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Mehdi Nemmouche, the French Islamist arrested on suspicion of a triple murder at the Brussels Jewish Museum, is to contest being handed over by France to Belgium, his lawyer said Wednesday.

Nemmouche was arrested in Marseille on Friday. He wants to stand trial in France and will fight a European arrest warrant issued by the Belgian authorities, the lawyer, Apolin Pepiezep told AFP.

The 29-year-old's decision to contest the warrant could delay by several weeks his return to Belgium, where authorities wish to question him in connection with a May 24 shooting, which left three people dead and another man in a critical condition.

A first hearing on the arrest warrant has been scheduled for Thursday at an appeal court in Versailles, in the Paris suburbs.

"We want him to be judged in France, first of all because he is French and he is in France," Pepiezep said, emphasising that some of the charges Nemmouche faces, such as the illegal carrying of arms, have been brought by the French authorities.

Picture released on June 1  2014 shows the 29-year-old suspected Jewish Museum gunman Mehdi Nemmouch...
Picture released on June 1, 2014 shows the 29-year-old suspected Jewish Museum gunman Mehdi Nemmouche
, AFP

Nemmouche, who spent over a year fighting in Syria with one of the most feared Islamist groups involved in that country's civil war, was arrested in possession of a Kalashnikov and a pistol similar to the weapons used in the museum killings.

He was also found to be carrying a camera on which he appeared to have filmed himself admitting responsibility for the attack, according to police sources.

"My client and I weighed up the pros and cons and agreed to oppose the request," the lawyer added. "We prefer that his case should be handled under French jurisdiction and we will argue that before the appeal court tomorrow."

The lawyer said he would not rule out an appeal in the event that Thursday's hearing results in the court supporting his client's transfer to Belgium.

Under European procedures -- which are designed to be much quicker than a full extradition process -- the suspect will have three days to appeal and the higher court will then have 40 days to issue a ruling on whether the handover can go ahead.

- First Syrian veteran -

According to police sources, Nemmouche has said virtually nothing to his interrogators since he was arrested following a random customs inspection of the bus on which he was travelling on its arrival in Marseille.

Apollin Pepiezep  the lawyer of Brussels shooting suspect Mehdi Nemmouche  speaks to the press  on J...
Apollin Pepiezep, the lawyer of Brussels shooting suspect Mehdi Nemmouche, speaks to the press, on June 4, 2014 outside the Appeal court of Versailles
Thomas Samson, AFP

Nemmouche's victims in Brussels included an Israeli couple and a French volunteer at the museum, who were all killed instantly. Another man, a museum employee, was left in a critical condition from which he has no prospect of recovery.

"I want to say to these barbarians that a man who kills another for the sake of his identity is an enemy of humankind," said French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve as he laid a wreath of flowers at the museum with his Belgian counterpart, Joelle Milquet, on Wednesday.

"The suspect that we stopped, like one of the victims, was French. That requires us to recognizee that the violence and the hatred that threatens us doesn't stop at borders."

Nemmouche is thought to be the first veteran of the Syrian conflict to have carried out an attack of this kind in Europe.

Terrorism experts have warned there could be more as battle-hardened militants who were born and raised in western European countries make their way back from Syria. Estimates from security agencies suggest there could be more than 1,500 such militants in Syria.

Nemmouche's attack came just over two years after another French Islamist gunman, Mohammed Merah, killed seven people in the southern city of Toulouse.

Merah's victims were a rabbi, three Jewish children and three French paratroopers. He died himself in a police shootout.

Mehdi Nemmouche, the French Islamist arrested on suspicion of a triple murder at the Brussels Jewish Museum, is to contest being handed over by France to Belgium, his lawyer said Wednesday.

Nemmouche was arrested in Marseille on Friday. He wants to stand trial in France and will fight a European arrest warrant issued by the Belgian authorities, the lawyer, Apolin Pepiezep told AFP.

The 29-year-old’s decision to contest the warrant could delay by several weeks his return to Belgium, where authorities wish to question him in connection with a May 24 shooting, which left three people dead and another man in a critical condition.

A first hearing on the arrest warrant has been scheduled for Thursday at an appeal court in Versailles, in the Paris suburbs.

“We want him to be judged in France, first of all because he is French and he is in France,” Pepiezep said, emphasising that some of the charges Nemmouche faces, such as the illegal carrying of arms, have been brought by the French authorities.

Picture released on June 1  2014 shows the 29-year-old suspected Jewish Museum gunman Mehdi Nemmouch...

Picture released on June 1, 2014 shows the 29-year-old suspected Jewish Museum gunman Mehdi Nemmouche
, AFP

Nemmouche, who spent over a year fighting in Syria with one of the most feared Islamist groups involved in that country’s civil war, was arrested in possession of a Kalashnikov and a pistol similar to the weapons used in the museum killings.

He was also found to be carrying a camera on which he appeared to have filmed himself admitting responsibility for the attack, according to police sources.

“My client and I weighed up the pros and cons and agreed to oppose the request,” the lawyer added. “We prefer that his case should be handled under French jurisdiction and we will argue that before the appeal court tomorrow.”

The lawyer said he would not rule out an appeal in the event that Thursday’s hearing results in the court supporting his client’s transfer to Belgium.

Under European procedures — which are designed to be much quicker than a full extradition process — the suspect will have three days to appeal and the higher court will then have 40 days to issue a ruling on whether the handover can go ahead.

– First Syrian veteran –

According to police sources, Nemmouche has said virtually nothing to his interrogators since he was arrested following a random customs inspection of the bus on which he was travelling on its arrival in Marseille.

Apollin Pepiezep  the lawyer of Brussels shooting suspect Mehdi Nemmouche  speaks to the press  on J...

Apollin Pepiezep, the lawyer of Brussels shooting suspect Mehdi Nemmouche, speaks to the press, on June 4, 2014 outside the Appeal court of Versailles
Thomas Samson, AFP

Nemmouche’s victims in Brussels included an Israeli couple and a French volunteer at the museum, who were all killed instantly. Another man, a museum employee, was left in a critical condition from which he has no prospect of recovery.

“I want to say to these barbarians that a man who kills another for the sake of his identity is an enemy of humankind,” said French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve as he laid a wreath of flowers at the museum with his Belgian counterpart, Joelle Milquet, on Wednesday.

“The suspect that we stopped, like one of the victims, was French. That requires us to recognizee that the violence and the hatred that threatens us doesn’t stop at borders.”

Nemmouche is thought to be the first veteran of the Syrian conflict to have carried out an attack of this kind in Europe.

Terrorism experts have warned there could be more as battle-hardened militants who were born and raised in western European countries make their way back from Syria. Estimates from security agencies suggest there could be more than 1,500 such militants in Syria.

Nemmouche’s attack came just over two years after another French Islamist gunman, Mohammed Merah, killed seven people in the southern city of Toulouse.

Merah’s victims were a rabbi, three Jewish children and three French paratroopers. He died himself in a police shootout.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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