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Carlos the Jackal awaits verdict over 1974 Paris bombing

Carlos the Jackal, whose real name is Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, was the world’s most wanted fugitive in the 1970s and early 1980s, when Europe was repeatedly targeted by groups sympathetic to the Palestinian cause © AFP/File

PARIS, Mar 28 – Self-styled revolutionary Carlos the Jackal, already serving two life sentences for murder, awaited a French court’s verdict Tuesday over a deadly 1974 grenade attack in a Paris shopping arcade.

French prosecutors are seeking a third life sentence for the 67-year-old Venezuela native who has described himself as an “officer of the Palestinian resistance”.

The verdict is expected around 3:00 pm (1300 GMT).

Carlos, whose real name is Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, was the world’s most wanted fugitive in the 1970s and early 1980s, when Europe was repeatedly targeted by groups sympathetic to the Palestinian cause.

He has been in prison in France since he was arrested by French elite police in the Sudanese capital Khartoum in 1994.

A sharp dresser with a taste for theatrics, Carlos boasted at the start of the trial two weeks ago: “No one in the Palestinian resistance has executed more people than I have.”

He has claimed personal responsibility for 80 deaths but repeatedly denied responsibility for the attack on the Drugstore Publicis pharmacy in an affluent district of Paris that claimed two lives and injured 34.

However, at one point during the trial he said: “Maybe it’s me, but there’s no proof of it.”

Carlos argued that he should not be required to testify against himself and said he faced death if he divulged operational information.

Little known at the time of the Drugstore Publicis attack, Carlos rose to international notoriety the following year when his commando group burst into a meeting of the powerful OPEC oil cartel in Vienna, taking 11 people hostage.

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Carlos the Jackal is already serving two life sentences for murder © AFP/File / Benoit PEYRUCQ

Carlos is serving a life sentences for the murders of two policemen in Paris in 1975 and that of a former comrade who betrayed him.

He was also found guilty of four bombings in Paris and Marseille in 1982 and 1983, some targeting trains, which killed a total of 11 people and injured nearly 150.

He was dubbed “Carlos the Jackal” by the press when he was giving international security services the slip while on the run.

The nickname came from a fictional terrorist in the 1971 Frederick Forsyth novel, “The Day of the Jackal”, which was turned into a popular film.

Georges Holleaux, a lawyer representing the two widows of the men killed and 16 other people affected by the attacks, said before the trial that his clients relished the chance of seeing Carlos face justice.

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