Paris attacks suspect tells court he is a soldier of Islamic State
Paris attacks suspect Salah Abdeslam has told a court he is "a soldier of Islamic State".
Abdeslam is among 20 men on trial accused of being involved in the 2015 atrocities at the Bataclan music theatre and other venues.
The so-called Islamic State (IS) terrorist attacks, which took place on 13 November 2015, killed 130 people and injured hundreds more.
Image: Salah AbdeslamNine gunmen and suicide bombers struck within minutes of each other at France's national football stadium, the Bataclan concert hall, and restaurants and cafes in the city.
The alleged lone survivor of the IS group, Salah Abdeslam, is expected to be the key defendant in the trial and is the only one charged with murder.
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The same IS network went on to strike Brussels months later, killing another 32 people.
Abdeslam, who abandoned his rental car in northern Paris and allegedly discarded a malfunctioning suicide vest before fleeing home to Brussels, has refused to speak to investigators.
More from WorldHe will be questioned several times throughout the trial, which is expected to last around nine months.
The 31-year-old arrived in court on Wednesday, dressed in black, and was seated behind a reinforced glass partition in the purpose-built courtroom.
He is thought to hold the answers to key questions about the attacks and the people who planned them, both in Europe and abroad.
Image: People arrive for the start of the trial of the Paris' November 2015 attacks at the Paris courthouse on the Ile de la Cite, in Paris, France, September 8, 2021. Twenty defendants stand trial over Paris' November 2015 attacks from September 8, 2021 toLawyers, journalists, victims and families who lost loved ones have packed out the court for the opening of the country's biggest criminal trial in history.
France's justice minister Eric Dupond-Moretti has called for the trial to follow "centuries-old rules", saying "the whole world is watching us" and the country must "live up to the logistic challenge".
He added: "13 November 2015 plunged all of France in horror. There was a before and an after. These events, in effect, have become part of our history and of course, our collective memory.
"The justice system must not be lacking, concerning these events."
Six of the 20 men accused will be tried in absentia, with five believed to have likely died in Syria.
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