French jihadist who spent ‘dozens days’ in Syria jailed for 7 years

Pierre Darkanian (R), lawyer of Flavien Moreau, a 27-year-old described in court documents as a determined Islamist militant, leaves a Paris court November 13, 2014.

Pierre Darkanian (R), lawyer of Flavien Moreau, a 27-year-old described in court documents as a determined Islamist militant, leaves a Paris court November 13, 2014.

The first French jihadist to stand trial after returning from Syria, where his nicotine cravings got the better of him, was sentenced to seven years in jail Thursday.

Flavien Moreau travelled to the conflict-ridden country at the end of 2012 but says he only managed to stay “a dozen days” as he was unable to stand a strict ban on smoking imposed by the Islamist militants he was with.

On his return, he was placed under surveillance by French anti-terrorist authorities who eventually detained him in January 2013 after hearing him say he was looking for fake ID to go back to Syria.

The 28-year-old, who is of South Korean origin and was adopted at an early age by a French family, turned to crime as a teenager and spent time in and out of jail after being sentenced 13 times for offences such as armed robbery.

He converted to Islam after getting out of prison, quickly became radicalized, went to study Arabic in Egypt and eventually decided to go to wage jihad in Syria.

He told the courtroom that he found a smuggler who took him to a Syrian village controlled by Islamist militants where he bought a Kalashnikov and munitions.

But he denied having done any fighting, saying he had only taken part in surveillance and policing.

“I found it really hard not to smoke… I had brought Nicorettes (an aid to stop smoking) but that wasn’t enough. So I gave my weapon to my emir and left.”

He returned to France to buy an electronic cigarette before attempting to go back to Syria.

But he kept being turned back at airports in Tunisia, Lebanon, Bulgaria or Germany, which is when he decided to get fake ID, prompting his detention.

When under surveillance on his return, investigators also found he was in regular contact with a 26-year-old man called Farid Djebbar, who was also put on trial.

Djebbar did not travel abroad but received two cash transfers from Moreau.

Investigators also found files on his computer containing jihadist videos, as well as searches on how to make a home-made bomb, on Al-Qaeda or Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), and two that contained the words “meet Francois Hollande” and “Francois Hollande’s movements.”

Djebbar was sentenced to four years in jail.

 
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