Brussels terror attack trial starts amid controversy over glass boxes for defendants
BRUSSELS (AA) – The 2016 Brussels terror attacks trial has started amid controversy over glass boxes built for the defendants.
With a preliminary hearing, the largest trial in Belgium’s history kicked off with over 960 plaintiffs represented against nine alleged members of ISIS.
The perpetrators are accused of carrying out terror attacks in Paris in November 2015 and in Belgium in March 2016.
The procedure is taking place at the former NATO headquarters, redesigned to meet the trial’s high security demands.
The defendants’ lawyers have already protested the transparent boxes that were expressly set up for the jihadist terrorists to give testimony.
Delphine Paci, who is defending the best-known perpetrator, Salah Abdeslam, said the boxes violate the European Convention of Human Rights. In the preliminary phase, a list of witnesses will be drawn up, and over 300 people are expected to be heard during the procedure.
The court will also decide if they maintain the glass boxes for the defendants before the actual trial starts on Oct. 13.
Nine members of the terror group, including one person in absentia who is believed to have been killed in Syria, will be prosecuted for their role in contributing to the terror attack on the metro and airport of Brussels that left 32 people dead and over 340 seriously injured.
In June, cell leader Abdeslam was sentenced to life in prison in France for his role in the 2015 Paris terror attacks.