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Crime

Charlie Hebdo terror suspect charged in Paris

December 23, 2018

Peter Cherif, who is suspected of helping to arrange the 2015 attack on the satirical magazine's offices, has been deported from Djibouti. He had been on the run for seven years following other alleged crimes.

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Je Suis Charlie sign illustration
Image: CHARLIE HEBDO

French authorities on Sunday served preliminary terrorism charges against a suspected jihadi accused of helping to organize the terrorist shooting at the Paris headquarters of the magazine Charlie Hebdo.

Peter Cherif arrived in the French capital earlier in the day after being arrested in Djibouti in North Africa on December 16 and deported.

The Paris prosecutor's office said Cherif was charged upon his arrival at Paris' Charles de Gaulle Airport.

Authorities say he played a crucial role in the attack in January 2015, which killed 12 people at the magazine's offices, as well as a police officer.

Read more: Strasbourg attack: Suspected accomplices arrested and charged

 Peter Cherif wird in ein Flugzeug gebracht  (Getty Images/H. Hersi)
Cherif boarded an Air France plane from Djibouti to Paris after being arrested earlier this monthImage: Getty Images/AFP

Praise of cooperation

Cherif, also known as Abu Hamza, was a close friend of Cherif and Said Kouachithe, two brothers who carried out the atrocity.

He is accused of criminal association with a terrorist enterprise.

French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner tweeted that Cherif had evaded French justice and that his detention in France was the result of the "efficiency of our security services and the international communication that permitted his arrest."

Read more: Why French police officers keep committing suicide

Cherif had traveled to Iraq and Syria in the early 2000s and had been on the run from French authorities since 2011.

A day after the Charlie Hebdo attack, a policewoman was killed just outside Paris, while another gunman took hostages at a Jewish supermarket, four of whom were killed.

All the attackers were killed in separate shootouts with police.

Read more: Is France's deradicalization strategy missing the point?

Trial request for 14 suspects

On Friday, French prosecutors filed a request for 14 people to stand before a jury for their suspected involvement in the attacks.

It will be up to anti-terrorist judges to decide whether all 14 are tried.

Those likely to face trial are accused of "complicity" in assisting the attackers, including providing them with weapons.

Authorities said the attackers had claimed allegiance to al-Qaida and the "Islamic State" militant group.

Martin Germer: 'We stand together'

mm/tj (AFP, AP, dpa)

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