Rachid Ramda

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Rachid Ramda (born September 29, 1969 [1], El Ogla, also known as "Abou Farès") has been convicted by the French justice system of being the mastermind behind the 1995 terror bombings in French public transportation systems. He has denied these accusations.[1]

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[edit] Algeria

Rachid Ramda was born in El Ogla on September 29, 1969, in the East of Algeria. He is from a Berber, Chaouia, family, although Arabic is his native language [1]. All the members of his family are well educated: one of his brothers is an architect-engineer, another a computer scientist.[1] Ramda studied architecture at the Institut Polytechnique.[1] He became a supporter of the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) when it was founded in 1988; his literature teacher was a co-founder of the FIS.[1] According to his own statements, he left Algeria in 1989 for Pakistan, thus before the cancellation of the elections which set the stage for the Algerian Civil War, and before the formation of the Armed Islamic Group (GIA).[1] In Pakistan he entered into contact with Muslim humanitarian NGOs and other NGOs (including Doctors Without Borders) assisting Afghan refugees.[1] He then abandoned his architectural training.[1] He went to London, where he wrote articles for the El Ansar newspaper.[1] Ramda has denied the allegations of French justice that El Ansar was the official mouthpiece of the GIA.[1]

In 1993, Ramda was sentenced to the death in Algeria in absentia for a terrorist attack at the airport of Algiers, which had killed 9 and wounded 123.[citation needed]

[edit] Extradition

Ramda was granted refugee status in the United Kingdom. After the 1995 terror bombings in Paris, he was arrested in London on November 4, 1995, accused by French prosecutors of having funded the bombings and of being their mastermind.[1] Ramda has denied the funding role, citing a report from the Scotland Yard inspector John MacMillan of November 23, 1995, which stated that "no bank accounts have been identified which could be associated with Ramda, or the other possible names used."[1] He did, however, admit that his fingerprints had been found on a Western Union money order of 38,000 Francs sent to the bomber Ait Ali Belkacem. Ramda claimed that he did not know Ait Ali Belkacem; he has also denied knowing the other bomber, Boualem Bensaid.[1] Ramda was detained in the HSSU high security unit of Belmarsh prison, which he has compared to Guantanamo. [1]

France requested the extradition of Ramda from the United Kingdom; Ramda successfully fought extradition until 2005. The refusal of British authorities to extradite Ramda was a point of contention between France and the UK, with many in France and elsewhere alleging that the British government was deliberately lenient to Islamist terrorists operating outside of the UK in order to buy peace in the UK (the alleged "Londonistan" policy). In fact, British ministers repeatedly tried to extradite Ramda, but had their decisions overturned by the British High Court.[2][3] The July 2005 London bombings changed sentiment and paved the way for Ramda's extradition in December 2005.[4]


Supporters of Ramda characterise him as an asylum seeker held for ten years in UK prisons without charge or trial and claim that this is a clear miscarriage of justice.[citation needed] Detractors note that in the legal sense, Ramda's stay in various UK prisons not just entirely voluntary, but costly to the British Tax Payer. Despite never paying a penny in Tax, he was given access to free legal aid for 10 years, where as he could at any point give up fighting extradition and stand trial in France[citation needed]. Ramda states, however, that he has been fighting extradition because of his fears of mistreatment of Muslims in the French justice system.[citation needed]

[edit] Trial in France

After exhausting all his appeals, Ramda was handed over to French custody on December 1, 2005. Transferred to the Palais de Justice of Paris, he was formally informed of four indictments laid against him by the French justice: one for criminal association with a terrorist organisation (specifically for providing funding to the Algerian Armed Islamic Group, or GIA), and three in relation to three terrorist attacks in Paris in 1995. The former, being a "délit", i.e. a crime of intermediate seriousness, would be tried in the Tribunal Correctionnel; and the latter three, considered felonies (that is, carrying a possible sentence of more than 10 years) in the Cour d'assises.

On March 29, 2006 Ramda was convicted of criminal association with a terrorist organisation and sentenced to ten years in prison by the Tribunal Correctionel, the maximum possible sentence. He had refused to co-operate in his own defense. This sentence was confirmed by the Appeal Court in December 2006.[5]

Ramda has been accused of being one of the masterminds of the Algerian radical islamist movement, and one of the main personalities of the Algerian Armed Islamic Group (GIA). However, others point out that his young age at the time of his arrest (only 25) and possible links with other, more senior, Islamic fundamentalists as indicating that he is only a low level functionary.[citation needed] Ramda himself has rejected these accusations in an October 2007 interview in Libération.[1]

The prosecution has pointed out that his fingerprints had been found on a Western Union money order of 38,000 Francs sent to the bomber Ait Ali Benkalcem. Ramda claims that he did not know Benkalcem, although he admits that it was his fingerprints on the money order. He claims that the prosecution has given a false interpretation of this evidence.[1] Further evidence submitted by the prosecution concerns wiretaps of phone communications between Ramda and the bombers in France, a short time before and after the bombings. According to Ramda, he has not been allowed to listen to these wiretaps, and he doubts they exist [1]. He denied having phoned the bombers and even knowing them.[1]

Furthermore, Ramda has stated that detention conditions in France were not much different from those in Belmarsh prison, and that he was badly treaten by French police. He declared that he thought, at first, that this was specific to terror suspects, but now he believes that all detainees are treated this way [1].

Another trial against him began in October 2007 before the Cour d'assises.[5] The bombers Bensaïd and Belkacem were both given life sentences in 2002, but Ramda's case had been severed from theirs.[6] He was charged of "complicity of assassination in relation with a terrorist enterprise."[6]. He was convicted in this trial on October 26, 2007, and given a life sentence, with the requirement that he serve at least twenty-two years.[7].[8]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t «La révolution était une obligation religieuse», interview with Rachid Ramda published in Libération on October 1st, 2007 read here (French)
  2. ^ "The Non-trial", The Economist, October 20, 2005.  (English)
  3. ^ "The extradition of Ramda examined on October 14", Le Nouvel Observateur, September 26, 2005.  (French)
  4. ^ French court convicts Algerian of Paris bombingsWashington Post, October 26, 2007 (English)
  5. ^ a b Dans "Libération", Rachid Ramda nie les accusations portées contre lui, Le Monde, October 1st, 2007 (French)
  6. ^ a b Rachid Ramda jugé pour les attentats de 1995, RTL, October 1st, 2007 (French)
  7. ^ "Algerian Jailed for Paris Blasts, BBC News (English)
  8. ^ French court convicts Algerian of Paris bombingsWashington Post, October 26, 2007 (English)
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