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Viewing cable 05PARIS479, FRENCH ARREST ELEVEN IN 'JIHADISTS TO IRAQ'
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Reference ID | Created | Released | Classification | Origin |
---|---|---|---|---|
05PARIS479 | 2005-01-26 18:06 | 2010-11-30 16:04 | SECRET | Embassy Paris |
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
S E C R E T PARIS 000479
SIPDIS
STATE FOR S/CT
E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/25/2014
TAGS: PTER PREL PGOV FR
SUBJECT: FRENCH ARREST ELEVEN IN 'JIHADISTS TO IRAQ'
INVESTIGATION
REF: PARIS 8760 AND PREVIOUS
Classified By: POLITICAL MINISTER COUNSELOR JOSIAH ROSENBLATT, FOR REAS
ONS 1.4 B/D
¶1. (SBU) Summary: French media reported on January 26 the
arrest two days prior of seven people suspected of
involvement in recruiting and sending French residents to
fight Coalition forces in Iraq. The Embassy also learned
that an additional four suspects were arrested in the morning
of January 26. These are the first arrests since the
investigation of French jihadists going to Iraq was begun in
September 2004. End summary.
¶2. (S) After French officials spent most of 2004 publicly
denying that French citizens might be going to Iraq, the
Paris Prosecutor's office ordered the opening of an
investigation in September 2004. Investigating judges
Jean-Louis Bruguiere and Jean-Francois Ricard were given
investigative authority. As reported reftel, the judges were
initially cautioned to be circumspect in their investigations
because of GOF fear that the investigation might harm two
French journalists held hostage in Iraq. The hostages were
released December 21, 2004. When last queried about the
investigation in early January, Ricard told Poloff that the
investigation was progressing, although authorities had no
indication of a distinct "network" sending Islamic radicals
to Iraq. Rather, they believed that the jihadists to Iraq
benefited from more informal support through local mosques
and families.
¶3. (S) In a lunch hosted by the Ambassador on January 24
(reported septel), Bruguiere revealed that several suspects
had been arrested that morning in connection with the
investigation. He added that in examining the case, he had
come across reports of the involvement of minors as young as
13-years-old. Two days later, the French press reported
these arrests and added additional detail. According to the
press reports, the DST (France's internal security service)
arrested seven people on January 24, three who were planning
to go fight in Iraq and four suspected of recruitment and
fundraising. Two of the seven are reported to be women. The
press reported that those arrested were affiliated with the
Adda'wa mosque in Paris' 19th arrondisement. Four French
citizens reported killed in Iraq had ties with mosques in the
19th arrondisement, and three of them had frequented the
Adda'wa mosque. An unnamed "high-level" Interior Ministry
official quoted in the reporting said police and security
services benefited from increased surveillance powers
included in the recently enacted Perben II law. (Comment:
This unnamed offical, probably a member of Interior Minister
Villepin's Cabinet, also lauded the counter-terrorism
policies enacted by Villepin as being instrumental in the
arrests. That is a stretch, given that Villepin did not
figure in the passing of Perben II or the assigning of the
case to the counter-terrorism investigating judges. End
comment.)
¶4. (S) Ricard (strictly protect) told Poloff January 26 that,
in addition to the seven arrested on January 24, an
additional four were arrested on January 26. He said that
none of those arrested was under 18, although some would
probably be implicated in recruiting minors for jihad in
Iraq. Of the eleven arrested, he said 3-4 were of "special
interest" to French authorities. Depending on the results of
the DST's interrogations, the others would either be released
or charged with relatively minor crimes. Ricard said the
investigation was ongoing and could involve additional
arrests.
¶5. (U) Minimize considered.
Leach