Police killer Carlos the Jackal back in court accused of historical terror bombing

A double police killer and once one of Europe’s most wanted terror suspects is facing trial for an alleged deadly bombing more than 40 years ago.

Mar 13, 2017
By Nick Hudson

A double police killer and once one of Europe’s most wanted terror suspects is facing trial for an alleged deadly bombing more than 40 years ago.

Ilyich Ramirez Sanchez, widely known as Carlos the Jackal and the perpetrator of headline-grabbing attacks in the 1970s and early 1980s, is due to appear in a French court on Monday (March 13) for the attack on a Paris shop in 1975.

With attention in France now focused on the ever-present threat of jihadist attacks, the trial in Paris will reach back to a time when Europe was repeatedly targeted by ruthless groups sympathetic to the Palestinian cause.

Ramirez, 67, a Venezuelan, describes himself as a “professional revolutionary” and was dubbed ‘Carlos the Jackal’ by the media when he was one of the world`s most wanted terror suspects.

The nickname came from a fictional terrorist in the 1971 Frederick Forsyth novel, The Day of the Jackal, which was turned into a popular film.

Arrested in the Sudanese capital Khartoum in 1994 by French law enforcement agencies, Ramirez is already serving a life sentence for the murders of two police officers killed in Paris in 1975 along with a Lebanese revolutionary.

He was also found guilty of four bombings in Paris and Marseille in 1982 and 1983, some targeting trains, which killed a total of 11 people and injured nearly 150.

Ramirez will appear before three judges for the attack on the Drugstore Publicis, a busy shop once located in Saint-Germain-des-Pres in the heart of Paris.

In the late afternoon of September 15, 1974, a grenade was thrown into the entrance of the store, killing two men and leaving 34 people injured.

Georges Holleaux, a lawyer representing the two widows of the men killed and 16 other people affected, said they relished the chance to finally see Ramirez in court.

“The victims have been waiting so long for Carlos to be judged and convicted. Their wounds have never healed,” he said.

Ramirez’ lawyer, Isabelle Coutant-Peyre, said the trial was a waste of time and money.

“What exactly is the point of having a trial so long after the events?” she said.

Ramirez denies the charges, which include “murders carried out with a terrorist organisation”.

Al Watan Al-Arabi magazine published an interview in 1979 in which he is said to have admitted that he had thrown the grenade into the shop.

He has since denied giving the interview.

The prosecution says the attack was linked to a hostage-taking at the French embassy in the Dutch capital The Hague that had begun two days earlier, on September 13, 1974.

The Japanese Red Army, a communist militant group which had close ties to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine in which Ramirez was the head of “special operations”, was demanding that French authorities free one of its members who had been arrested at Paris Orly airport two months early.

The prosecution says Ramirez orchestrated the Hague hostage-taking and carried out the Paris grenade attack to force the French government to give in to the Japanese group`s demands.

He achieved his aim – the Japanese suspect was released and was able to travel to Yemen with other members of the Hague hostage-taking team.

The case against Ramirez is also based on witness testimony from his former brothers-in-arms, including Hans-Joachim Klein, a German to whom the Venezuelan is said to have admitted he wanted to “apply pressure to get the Japanese man freed”.

Investigators have tracked the provenance of the grenade and say it came from the same batch as those used by the Hague hostage-takers and had been stolen from a US army base in 1972. One was also found at the Paris home of Ramirez’ mistress.

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