The leader of a banned French group was sentenced to nine years in
jail on Friday on terrorism charges after police raids found weapons and
a list of Jewish targets in his personal files.
The Paris court handed down the sentence to Mohamed Achamlane, one of
14 people tried on charges of "criminal conspiracy related to a
terrorist enterprise".
The trial followed raids on the homes of members of a group called
Forsane Alizza (Horsemen of Pride in Arabic), which was banned in 2012.
Police found weapons in the raids as well as a file belonging to
Achamlane that included a list of targets including the Hyper Cacher
chain of Jewish stores.
The ruling comes six months after Islamist militants killed 17 people
in attacks on the Charlie Hebdo newspaper and a Jewish shop, prompting
France to boost troops guarding sensitive spots such as synagogues and
train stations, but was not linked to those attacks.
The group was created in 2010 with the official goal of stopping the
spread of Islamophobia but it was banned by the government in March 2012
after jihadist propaganda appeared on its website.
Achamlane, 37, who has previous convictions for offences related to
weapons and violence, denied any plans to carry out attacks and said the
group's aim was simply to "unite young Muslims".
France has remained on the top security alert since the Jan. 7-9 killings at Charlie Hebdo and the foodstore.
The other 13 were handed sentences ranging from a suspended one year term to six years in jail.
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