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Prosecutors confirm Frenchman in IS execution video

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A young Frenchman was one of the jihadists in an Islamic State video that appeared to show the beheading of Syrian soldiers and a US aid worker, prosecutors said on Monday.

The man is believed to be 22-year-old Maxime Hauchard from a small village in Normandy in northern France.

He is thought to have "left for Syria in August 2013 after a stay in Mauritania in 2012," Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve told reporters.

The Paris prosecutor's office said "circumstantial evidence confirms the involvement of a Frenchman in the decapitation of Syrian prisoners shown in an Islamic State video released on Sunday."

An investigation into Hauchard was opened in August by French authorities "for criminal association in relation to a terrorist organisation," a judicial source said.

French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve holds a press conference in Paris  on November 17  2014
French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve holds a press conference in Paris, on November 17, 2014
Thomas Samson, AFP

The video released on Sunday shows the young, bearded man in camouflage fatigues alongside fellow combatants.

Prisoners are lined up on their knees in front of them. The man resembling Hauchard is seen placing a knife to the collar of one of the prisoners. The victim is later shown having his throat cut, though Hauchard's face is not visible in the shot.

Hauchard was interviewed in July by French TV station BFM. He spoke over Skype from the Syrian city of Raqqa -- an IS stronghold -- saying he had travelled from Paris via Istanbul.

He said the ticket was "not expensive" and he had taken no precautions to hide his journey.

Converted to Islam at 17, he told the station he had decided to join the jihad after watching videos online.

In this Kassig Family handout released on October 4  2014  US aid worker Peter Kassig leans against ...
In this Kassig Family handout released on October 4, 2014, US aid worker Peter Kassig leans against a truck at an unknown location
, Kassig Family/AFP

He said he travelled alone and had quickly been taken under the wing of IS once he entered Syria.

"To show allegiance, you must first go to a training camp. The first stage lasts around a month. We do some training, we go on operations and after that we return to training. It's not just theory," he told BFM.

He said he lived in barracks with around 40 other jihadists -- mostly Arabs from Egypt, Morocco and Algeria, but also France.

"The personal objective of everyone here is shahid (martyrdom). That is the greatest reward," he said.

In Hauchard's home village of Bosc-Roger-en-Roumois in the northern Eure district -- population 3,000 -- there was shock at the news of his involvement in IS.

Timeline of executions of Western hostages by Islamic State militants and other jihadist groups
Timeline of executions of Western hostages by Islamic State militants and other jihadist groups
, Graphics/AFP

"He did not go to do harm," said Rene, a neighbour who watched Hauchard grow up.

"He was a nice boy, who never caused problems. They must have drugged him," said Rene's wife, Jeannine.

An intelligence source said it was being verified whether a second French citizen was among the jihadists seen in Sunday's video.

Around a thousand French are thought to have taken part in the conflict in Syria and Iraq, with around 375 currently there, the government has said. At least 36 have died there.

Overall, some 3,000 Europeans had joined the jihadists, EU counterterrorism chief Gilles de Kerchove said in September.

A young Frenchman was one of the jihadists in an Islamic State video that appeared to show the beheading of Syrian soldiers and a US aid worker, prosecutors said on Monday.

The man is believed to be 22-year-old Maxime Hauchard from a small village in Normandy in northern France.

He is thought to have “left for Syria in August 2013 after a stay in Mauritania in 2012,” Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve told reporters.

The Paris prosecutor’s office said “circumstantial evidence confirms the involvement of a Frenchman in the decapitation of Syrian prisoners shown in an Islamic State video released on Sunday.”

An investigation into Hauchard was opened in August by French authorities “for criminal association in relation to a terrorist organisation,” a judicial source said.

French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve holds a press conference in Paris  on November 17  2014

French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve holds a press conference in Paris, on November 17, 2014
Thomas Samson, AFP

The video released on Sunday shows the young, bearded man in camouflage fatigues alongside fellow combatants.

Prisoners are lined up on their knees in front of them. The man resembling Hauchard is seen placing a knife to the collar of one of the prisoners. The victim is later shown having his throat cut, though Hauchard’s face is not visible in the shot.

Hauchard was interviewed in July by French TV station BFM. He spoke over Skype from the Syrian city of Raqqa — an IS stronghold — saying he had travelled from Paris via Istanbul.

He said the ticket was “not expensive” and he had taken no precautions to hide his journey.

Converted to Islam at 17, he told the station he had decided to join the jihad after watching videos online.

In this Kassig Family handout released on October 4  2014  US aid worker Peter Kassig leans against ...

In this Kassig Family handout released on October 4, 2014, US aid worker Peter Kassig leans against a truck at an unknown location
, Kassig Family/AFP

He said he travelled alone and had quickly been taken under the wing of IS once he entered Syria.

“To show allegiance, you must first go to a training camp. The first stage lasts around a month. We do some training, we go on operations and after that we return to training. It’s not just theory,” he told BFM.

He said he lived in barracks with around 40 other jihadists — mostly Arabs from Egypt, Morocco and Algeria, but also France.

“The personal objective of everyone here is shahid (martyrdom). That is the greatest reward,” he said.

In Hauchard’s home village of Bosc-Roger-en-Roumois in the northern Eure district — population 3,000 — there was shock at the news of his involvement in IS.

Timeline of executions of Western hostages by Islamic State militants and other jihadist groups

Timeline of executions of Western hostages by Islamic State militants and other jihadist groups
, Graphics/AFP

“He did not go to do harm,” said Rene, a neighbour who watched Hauchard grow up.

“He was a nice boy, who never caused problems. They must have drugged him,” said Rene’s wife, Jeannine.

An intelligence source said it was being verified whether a second French citizen was among the jihadists seen in Sunday’s video.

Around a thousand French are thought to have taken part in the conflict in Syria and Iraq, with around 375 currently there, the government has said. At least 36 have died there.

Overall, some 3,000 Europeans had joined the jihadists, EU counterterrorism chief Gilles de Kerchove said in September.

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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