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Expelled from France, jihadist attacker 'mentor' Beghal to be retried in Algeria

A radical Islamic preacher, who became a mentor to at least two jihadists who carried out attacks in France, will be retried in Algeria after he was expelled Monday from France, state media in Algiers said.

Benoît Peyrucq, AFP | A sketch of Djamel Beghal at the Paris Court of Appeals on October 7, 2014.
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Djamel Beghal was given a 10-year jail term in 2005 after being sent to France following his arrest in the United Arab Emirates shortly after the September 11, 2001, terror attacks in the US.

France on Monday expelled him to Algeria after his release from prison.

“Djamel Beghal, who had been sentenced to 20 years in Algeria for membership in a terrorist group, was handed over to Algerian authorities on Monday,” Algeria’s APS news agency said.

Beghal would be put on trial again in Algeria, APS reported, citing a source close to the case.

During his incarceration in France, Beghal became a mentor to at least two jihadists who carried out deadly attacks on a satirical newspaper and a Jewish supermarket in January 2015.

He was suspected of leading a network charged by Osama bin Laden to attack American interests in France and is considered by French officials to have been a mentor for several generations of aspiring jihadists.

His activities have also highlighted the struggle by French authorities to prevent Islamic radicalisation in prisons, which have proved fertile recruiting grounds for jihadist fighters.

Beghal, now 52 and stripped of his French nationality, was freed from the Vezin-le-Coquet prison near the western city of Rennes early Monday.

He was brought to Charles de Gaulle airport near Paris and put on a flight to Algiers, a source close to the case told AFP.

Beghal had been under surveillance for suspected radicalism by French intelligence agents since the mid-1990s, following his arrival in the country from his native Algeria when he was 21 years old.

While serving his first prison sentence Beghal met Cherif Kouachi, one of the brothers who massacred 12 people in an attack on the Charlie Hebdo magazine in January 2015.

Amedy Coulibaly, the man who killed a policewoman and then four shoppers at a Jewish supermarket just outside Paris that same month, also came under Beghal’s influence at the Fleury-Merogis prison south of Paris, where he also met Kouachi.

After their release, both Kouachi and Coulibaly visited Beghal while he was serving out his sentence under house arrest.

Beghal was arrested again in 2010 as part of a plot to free him as well as Smain Ait Ali Belkacem, an Algerian who helped carry out Paris bomb attacks in 1995 which killed eight people.

France has suffered a wave of deadly terror attacks since January 2015 which have claimed nearly 250 lives, prompting the government to make permanent several state of emergency measures as part of a tough new anti-terror law enacted last year.

(AFP)

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