Carlos the Jackal faces terrorism panel over 1980s bombings
PARIS — Gray hair and a paunch have replaced the beret, leather
jacket and dark glasses but Carlos the Jackal’s defiance remains intact
before he stands trial in France for a series of bombings in the 1980s.
The international revolutionary from Venezuela, born Ilich Ramirez
Sanchez, built a career as one of the world’s best known guerrillas
after a hostage-taking of OPEC oil ministers in the name of the
Palestinian struggle in 1975.
Since his capture and sentencing nearly two decades ago, the Jackal has been resident of a French prison.
On Monday, Ramirez, already condemned to life in jail, will face a
three-judge terrorism panel to answer charges he was behind four urban
bombings in France that killed 11 people and wounded nearly 200 in the
early 1980s.
“I am really in a combative mood,” Ramirez, 62, told Europe 1 radio
last month. “I’m not fearful by nature…My character is suited to this
kind of combat.”
The Marxist with a Che Guevara beret became the face of 1970s and 80s
anti-imperialism, his taste for women and alcohol adding to his
revolutionary mystique.
“He was the symbol of international leftist terrorism,” said
Francois-Bernard Huyghe, a terrorism expert at the Institute of
International and Strategic Relations, IRIS, in Paris. “One day it could
be in the service of the Palestinian cause, the next day he could put
bombs in French trains. He was a kind of star.”
Ramirez’s got his nickname after a reporter saw a copy of Frederick
Forsyth’s “The Day of the Jackal” at his flat and mistakenly assumed it
to be his.
His larger-than-life ego manifests itself today in waging hunger
strikes and writing letters to U.S. President Barack Obama. He also
married his attorney inside the prison walls.
But he and his modus operandi are anachronisms, experts say.
“Carlos the Jackal was the Osama bin Laden of his day,” his
biographer, John Follain, told Reuters TV. “Terrorism has evolved so
much that today he represents a solitary voice in the desert, a pretty
old-fashioned voice.”
Huyghe was more blunt: “A man like Carlos is really a dinosaur today. I think of him as ‘historical remains’.”
FIST IN AIR
Prosecutors say the bombs that ripped through trains, stations and
parked cars in 1982 and 1983 were Ramirez’s riposte to the police
seizure of two of his gang, including his lover.
Ramirez’s fingerprints, they say, were on a threatening letter sent to the interior minister to demand their release.
But Ramirez’s lawyer, Francis Vuillemin, says the letter does not
exist and the trial is a sham, based on questionable evidence provided
by state secret service agencies.
“Obviously he’s not an angel,” Vuillemin told Reuters TV. “He himself
represents himself as a commando officer and as a political
revolutionary leader. Those are his words, not mine.”
If found guilty, Ramirez could receive a maximum penalty of life in prison. He would have to serve at least 22 years.
When convicted for killing two French police officers and an
informant in 1997, Ramirez raised his handcuffed fist defiantly and
smiled before being ushered out of court.
“I was condemned in a sewn-up case, without proof or witnesses,” he told Liberation newspaper last month.
SHADY DEALINGS
The son of a wealthy Marxist attorney, Ramirez studied in Moscow and
soon joined a radical group, the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine. He began his life with a cause, but his constant need for
weapons, papers and shelter led him to seek paymasters wherever he
could.
With Soviet bloc protectors in short supply by the end of the Cold
War, life got more difficult for Ramirez, who hopped from place to place
seeking jobs.
By 1994, when he was captured in Khartoum by French agents and
brought back to France — an episode Ramirez refers to as his
“kidnapping” — the Jackal had morphed into an international gangster
paid by shady governments across the world.
However, the former ultra-left commando still bridles at suggestions he was a mercenary.
“I’m certain that this man believes what he says,” said Huyghe. “But
when you get into illegality … you start having links with gangsters and
you begin behaving like a gangster.
“It was a very complicated life, sometimes he was in Beirut,
sometimes he was in Sudan, he was negotiating with secret services. It’s
a kind of business. After all, he is a businessman and he liked money.”
CIGARS AND SOLITUDE
Ramirez converted to Islam in 1975 and his time in prison is spent
studying philosophy and reading the news. He particularly supports the
European protesters who have taken to the streets to protest against
austerity measures and corporate wrongdoing.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez once called his countryman a
“revolutionary fighter” but the embassy has stopped sending him Havana
cigars in prison, Ramirez complained to Liberation.
He used to run into Manuel Noriega, the former Panamanian strongman
who has been locked up in France since 2010, in jail but they have not
been allowed to chat recently.
“I can’t shave, I can’t cut my nails — see, they’re tormenting me, they want to make my life difficult,” Ramirez told Europe 1.
Still, Ramirez believes it’s a “miracle” he’s alive today, given what he has been through
source: nationalpost
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