Carlos the Jackal seeks to reduce life sentence for deadly 1974 grenade
attack
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[September 22, 2021]
PARIS (Reuters) - Carlos the Jackal,
the leftist militant who carried out attacks across the globe in the
1970s and 1980s, opened a bid in a French court on Wednesday to reduce
the life sentence he had been given for a deadly grenade attack on a
Paris shop in 1974.
The self-declared "professional revolutionary", whose real name is Ilich
Ramirez Sanchez, has been behind bars in France since he was captured
and spirited out of Sudan by French special forces in 1994.
He was found guilty in 2017 over a grenade attack in 1974 on a shop on
Paris's Champs Elysees, the Drugstore Publicis, that killed two people
and injured 36.
The appeal that started on Wednesday will not seek to overturn that
conviction but will only concern how many years he should be jailed for,
after the country's top court struck down the latest ruling over
technicalities and sent it back to the lower court.
The decision is expected on Friday.
Ramirez, who was born in Venezuela and is now aged 71, is already
serving two other life terms and has lost appeals against them.
One is for the murder of two French police officers and an informant in
June 1975 and the other for attacks on trains, a railway station and a
Paris street in 1982 and 1983 that killed 11 people and wounded about
150 others.
In the 1970s and 1980s, the Marxist militant, became public enemy number
one for Western governments and the world' most wanted man.
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Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, better known as "Carlos the Jackal", raises
his fist as he appears in court in Paris November 28, 2000
coinciding with a trial in Frankfurt of his former German accomplice
[Hans-Joachim Klein]. Carlos and Klein where jailed for the 1975
kidnapping of OPEC ministers in Vienna in which three people were
killed. The French authorities did not permit Carlos to travel to
German for the trial of Klein and instead appeared before German
justice authorities in Paris's law courts. ? QUALITY VIDEO DOCUMENT
(CREDIT REUTERS/RTV/Thierry Chiarello)/File Photo
He sealed his international notoriety by taking
OPEC's oil ministers hostage in the name of the Palestinian struggle
in a raid on its Vienna headquarters in 1975 in which three people
were killed.
The nickname was given to him by the media after a reporter saw a
copy of Frederick Forsyth's "The Day of the Jackal" at Ramirez's
London flat.
(Reporting by Ingrid Melander, Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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