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Paris suicide bomber left Belgium for Syria in 2013: Prosecutors

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A Belgian-Moroccan man who blew himself up during a police raid days after the Paris attacks had travelled in 2013 to Syria where he joined the Islamic State group, Belgian prosecutors said Friday.

Chakib Akrouh, a suspected gunman in the Paris attacks whose identity was released in Paris on Thursday, used a one-way ticket to fly from Brussels to Istanbul on January 4, 2013, the federal prosecutor's office said.

"The investigation then indicated his presence in Syria from January 2013 when he joined the ranks of the Katibat al-Muhajereen, then the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant," it said in a statement, using another name for the Islamic State.

Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said on Thursday that Akrouh, a 25-year-old Belgian-Moroccan dual national who was born in Belgium, was identified from DNA matched to his mother.

Akrouh had been holed up in an apartment in the northern Paris suburb of Saint-Denis with the suspected ringleader of the Paris attacks, Abelhamid Abaaoud, who was also a Belgian of Moroccan origin.

Belgian-Moroccan Chakib Akrouh was a suspected gunman in the Paris attacks who blew himself up durin...
Belgian-Moroccan Chakib Akrouh was a suspected gunman in the Paris attacks who blew himself up during a police raid in the French capital
-, OFF/AFP/File

Akrouh blew himself up when police raided the flat, while Abaaoud and a French woman, Hasna Aitboulahcen, who is thought to have been Abaaoud's cousin, were also killed.

Prosecutors initially mistakenly said the woman had been the suicide bomber.

The Belgian prosecutor said a court in Belgium sentenced Akrouh to five years in jail in absentia last July over jihadist recruitment network sending fighters to Syria. Abaaoud was sentenced to 20 years in the same case, also in absentia.

The Belgian prosecutor's office said "an analysis of photographs from the person seen at the side of Abdelhamid Abaaoud in the Paris metro on November 13, 2015 at 10:14 pm after the Paris attacks, allowed federal investigators to make the link on December 17 2015 with with the so-named Chakib Akrouh."

It added that "a DNA test from (Akrouh's) mother was carried out on December 17, 2015 and the comparison with the DNA sample from the blast site in Saint Denis confirmed it was that of Chakib Akrouh."

A Belgian-Moroccan man who blew himself up during a police raid days after the Paris attacks had travelled in 2013 to Syria where he joined the Islamic State group, Belgian prosecutors said Friday.

Chakib Akrouh, a suspected gunman in the Paris attacks whose identity was released in Paris on Thursday, used a one-way ticket to fly from Brussels to Istanbul on January 4, 2013, the federal prosecutor’s office said.

“The investigation then indicated his presence in Syria from January 2013 when he joined the ranks of the Katibat al-Muhajereen, then the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant,” it said in a statement, using another name for the Islamic State.

Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said on Thursday that Akrouh, a 25-year-old Belgian-Moroccan dual national who was born in Belgium, was identified from DNA matched to his mother.

Akrouh had been holed up in an apartment in the northern Paris suburb of Saint-Denis with the suspected ringleader of the Paris attacks, Abelhamid Abaaoud, who was also a Belgian of Moroccan origin.

Belgian-Moroccan Chakib Akrouh was a suspected gunman in the Paris attacks who blew himself up durin...

Belgian-Moroccan Chakib Akrouh was a suspected gunman in the Paris attacks who blew himself up during a police raid in the French capital
-, OFF/AFP/File

Akrouh blew himself up when police raided the flat, while Abaaoud and a French woman, Hasna Aitboulahcen, who is thought to have been Abaaoud’s cousin, were also killed.

Prosecutors initially mistakenly said the woman had been the suicide bomber.

The Belgian prosecutor said a court in Belgium sentenced Akrouh to five years in jail in absentia last July over jihadist recruitment network sending fighters to Syria. Abaaoud was sentenced to 20 years in the same case, also in absentia.

The Belgian prosecutor’s office said “an analysis of photographs from the person seen at the side of Abdelhamid Abaaoud in the Paris metro on November 13, 2015 at 10:14 pm after the Paris attacks, allowed federal investigators to make the link on December 17 2015 with with the so-named Chakib Akrouh.”

It added that “a DNA test from (Akrouh’s) mother was carried out on December 17, 2015 and the comparison with the DNA sample from the blast site in Saint Denis confirmed it was that of Chakib Akrouh.”

AFP
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