Salah Abdeslam: The mystery of France's most-wanted man
Nine
days after the terror attacks that killed 130 people, a clearer picture
is emerging of his movements -- and it seems Abdeslam fled the city
late on the night of November 13 in a state of panic.
Information
from sources close to the investigation draw a picture of a man on the
run, and how that run began. On the evening of the attacks, Abdeslam,
26, was thought to have been the driver of a black Renaut Clio that
dropped off three suicide bombers near the Stade de France.
Then
he drove five kilometers south; sources say he was probably en route
when his older brother Ibrahim blew himself up at the Comptoir Voltaire
café.
Four days later, last
Tuesday, the Clio was found abandoned in the Place Albert Kahn in Paris'
18th arrondissement. It appeared to have been parked hurriedly on a
pedestrian crossing.
This
is where the mystery begins. Was Abdeslam meant to carry out a separate
attack? Or join the men who had already burst into the Bataclan theater? Or return to Brussels, where he lived, to plan another attack?
Whatever
the plan may have been, Abdeslam stayed under the radar for four hours
amid the chaos enveloping the French capital, sources said. Then, at
about 2 a.m, he allegedly made a call to acquaintances in the Belgian
capital and asked them to collect him.
Moroccan-born
Mohammed Amri, 27, and Hamza Attou, 21, arrived in Paris at about 5
a.m. and picked up Abdeslam from the Barbes district, close to where he
had abandoned his car.
They set out
immediately on the return trip. But it was not without incident. The car
was stopped by police close to Cambrai, which is near the Belgian
border, and its occupants had their documents checked. But at that time
-- around 9 a.m. -- French authorities had not established who might
have carried out the attack, and the three men were allowed to continue
to Brussels.
One source close to the
investigation told CNN: "Police saw that one of them had a criminal
record, but there was nothing to link them to the attacks."
It
was later that French police realized Abdeslam's alleged involvement --
probably after discovering another car he had rented which had three
AK-47s in the trunk.
By then he had
vanished. Amri and Attou were arrested after returning to Brussels and
have since been charged with "complicity in terrorist attacks and
participation in the activities of terrorist organizations."
Adding
to the mystery about Abdeslam's alleged role was an audio and video
message from ISIS issued the morning after the attacks. It referred to
"eight brothers" -- but only seven had been involved in the actual
attacks, according to police. And it glorified their operations in 10th,
11th and 18th arrondissements-- except there had been no operation in
the 18th arrondissement, where Abdeslam had allegedly parked.
One
source familiar with investigators' thinking told CNN: "His movements
make no sense. The way he dumped the vehicle, the hours that passed
before he made a call to people who are now alleged conspirators, using
the main autoroute (highway) to Belgium, it seems he lost control."
The
lawyers for Amri and Attou insist their clients had no knowledge of
what Abdeslam was suspected of doing in Paris. Carine Couquelet, who
represents Attou, said her client had found Abdeslam "extremely agitated
and maybe ready to blow himself up."
Speaking
with Belgian network LCI, Couquelet said Attou had mentioned Abdeslam
carrying "a big jacket and other things, maybe something like an
explosive belt or something like that."
But he had been calm at the checkpoints the three had to negotiate on their way back to Brussels, according to Attou's account.
Couquelet
then asked the questions that are probably preoccupying French and
Belgian investigators as they continue the search for Abdeslam.
"There
are a few hypotheses to take into account: Was he part of the group [of
terrorists]? Was he logistical support? Was he supposed to blow himself
up? Was he supposed to do it and didn't have the courage to? We don't
know."
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