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Former French Legionnaire alleged to be Paris attacks mastermind

The United States on 22 November named a French veteran of the Foreign Legion as a suspect in the planning of bloody attacks in Paris and Brussels.

A man pays his respects under a commemorative plaque unveiled by French President François Hollande during a ceremony held for the victims of last year's Paris attacks.
A man pays his respects under a commemorative plaque unveiled by French President François Hollande during a ceremony held for the victims of last year's Paris attacks. Reuters/Gonzalo Fuentes
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The US State Department added Abdelilah Himich, also known as Abu Suleiman Al-Faransi, to its list of "specially designated global terrorists."

The designation said he founded the 300-strong Islamic State "European foreign terrorist fighter cell" and reportedly helped plan the deadly attacks.

US and French officials describe Himich as 27- or 28-years-old and as a Moroccan-born French citizen who served six months in the French Foreign Legion.

In November last year, Islamists attacked the Bataclan concert hall in Paris, sprayed cafes with bullets and set off bombs outside the Stade de France when French and German football teams were playing. In all 130 people died, and hundreds more were hurt.

Then in March, suicide bombers attacked Brussels airport and a metro station, killing 32 more.

According to the State Department, Himich helped plan these attacks, as well as providing fighters for Islamic State operations in Iraq and Syria.

The list also includes Abdullah Ahmed al-Meshedani, who allegedly houses fighters, answering to IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

It also named Basil Hassan, who is accused of shooting and wounding Lars Hedegaard, a 70-year-old Danish historian, in February 2013.

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