Relative of Hebdo killer indicted on terror charges in France

Mourad Hamyd, brother-in-law of jihadi who carried out attack on satirical magazine, accused of trying to join Islamic State in Syria

Mourad Hamyd, center, is escorted by police officers, arriving at the courthouse in Sofia, Bulgaria, on August 10, 2016. (AFP/ DIMITAR DILKOFF)
Mourad Hamyd, center, is escorted by police officers, arriving at the courthouse in Sofia, Bulgaria, on August 10, 2016. (AFP/ DIMITAR DILKOFF)

PARIS — The brother-in-law of one of the jihadists who attacked French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo last year faced terrorism charges on Saturday for allegedly trying to join Islamic State fighters in Syria, a judicial source said.

French student Mourad Hamyd, 20, was charged by an anti-terrorism judge in Paris with “associating with terrorists” and held in custody.

Hamyd, whose sister Izzana was married to Charlie Hebdo gunman Cherif Kouachi, had been sent back to France on Friday from Bulgaria where he had tried to cross the border into Turkey in late July. But Turkish officials handed him over to Bulgarian border authorities.

France requested Hamyd’s extradition on July 29, accusing him of “conspiring to prepare acts of terrorism.”

French prosecutors said that the route taken by Hamyd — by train through Austria, Hungary, Serbia and Bulgaria — corresponded to the one traditionally taken by jihadist fighters wanting to join the Islamic State in Syria or Iraq.

Hamyd told Bulgarian authorities that he was only a tourist and had “no ties” to IS, but nevertheless he agreed to be returned to France.

Armed gunmen face police officers near the offices of the French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo in Paris on January 7, 2015, during an attack on the offices of the newspaper which left 12 dead. (Photo credit: AFP/ ANNE GELBARD)
Armed gunmen face police officers near the offices of the French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo in Paris on January 7, 2015, during an attack on the offices of the newspaper which left 12 dead. (Photo credit: AFP/ ANNE GELBARD)

Al-Qaeda-linked Cherif Kouachi together with his brother Said, killed 12 people at Charlie Hebdo’s Paris headquarters on January 7, 2015, in the first of a series of jihadist attacks that have hit France over the past year and a half.

Hamyd first came into the spotlight in the immediate aftermath of the Charlie Hebdo attack, when he was wrongly identified on social media as being among the killers. He was taken in for questioning and later freed.

Most Popular
read more: