In this courtroom sketch, Salah Abdeslam, center, sits between two police officers during his trial at the Brussels Justice Palace in Brussels on Monday, Feb. 5, 2018. Salah Abdeslam and Soufiane Ayari face trial for taking part in a shooting incident in Vorst, Belgium on March 15, 2016. The incident took place when six members of a Franco-Belgian research team investigating the attacks in Paris were conducting a search in an allegedly empty safe house of the terrorists and were attacked. (Petra Urban via AP)
The Associated Press
BRUSSELS (AP) - The sole surviving suspect in the November 2015 attacks on Paris refused to re-appear in a trial that victims had hoped would shed light on the Islamic State network that struck again in Brussels, a court said Tuesday.
Salah Abdeslam appeared on Monday, defying the court and refusing to answer any questions about the March 2016 shootout with police in Brussels that led to his capture. It was his first public appearance.
But the Brussels court said Tuesday that Abdeslam informed the tribunal he did not wish to appear at the next hearing, scheduled for Thursday. Abdeslam, who is in solitary confinement in France where he faces allegations linked to the Paris attacks, is not required to attend the trial in Brussels. He has refused to answer a French investigating judge's questions and responded similarly to the Belgian jurist.
Abdeslam was Europe's most-wanted fugitive at the time of the March 15, 2016, shootout. He and an accomplice, Sofiane Ayari, escaped from their hideout while a third jihadi opened fire on police. Three police officers were injured. The pair were captured three days later.
The two are charged with attempted murder in a terrorist context and face up to 20 years in prison.
Four days after their capture, the Islamic State network linked to the Paris attacks struck the Brussels airport and metro. In all, 162 people were killed in the two cities, in addition to nearly all the attackers.
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This story has corrected the year of the shootout to 2016, not 2015.
A police convoy presumed to be carrying Salah Abdeslam and Soufiane Ayari leaves the Brussels Justice Palace in Brussels on Monday, Feb. 5, 2018. Salah Abdeslam and Soufiane Ayari face trial for taking part in a shooting incident in Vorst, Belgium on March 15, 2016. The incident took place when six members of a Franco-Belgian research team investigating the attacks in Paris were conducting a search in an allegedly empty safe house of the terrorists and were attacked. (AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert)
The Associated Press
In this courtroom sketch, Salah Abdeslam, second right, and Soufiane Ayari, second left, attend their trial at the Brussels Justice Palace in Brussels on Monday, Feb. 5, 2018. Salah Abdeslam and Soufiane Ayari face trial for taking part in a shooting incident in Vorst, Belgium on March 15, 2016. The incident took place when six members of a Franco-Belgian research team investigating the attacks in Paris were conducting a search in an allegedly empty safe house of the terrorists and were attacked. (Petra Urban via AP)
The Associated Press
A police convoy presumed to be carrying Salah Abdeslam and Soufiane Ayari leaves the Brussels Justice Palace in Brussels on Monday, Feb. 5, 2018. Salah Abdeslam and Soufiane Ayari face trial for taking part in a shooting incident in Vorst, Belgium on March 15, 2016. The incident took place when six members of a Franco-Belgian research team investigating the attacks in Paris were conducting a search in an allegedly empty safe house of the terrorists and were attacked. (AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert)
The Associated Press
Belgian lawyer Sven Mary, left, arrives for the trial of Salah Abdeslam at the Brussels Justice Palace in Brussels on Monday, Feb. 5, 2018. Salah Abdeslam and Soufiane Ayari face trial for taking part in a shooting incident in Vorst, Belgium on March 15, 2016. The incident took place when six members of a Franco-Belgian research team investigating the attacks in Paris were conducting a search in an allegedly empty safe house of the terrorists and were attacked. (AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert)
The Associated Press