Lawyers for the only known survivor of a group of Islamist militants who
killed 130 people in Paris last year have resigned, saying his continued
refusal to testify is due to the conditions of his detention.
Salah Abdeslam, who has been held in solitary
confinement near Paris since he was captured earlier this year, does not want
to talk and no longer wants legal representation, his lawyers Frank Berton and
Sven Mary said on BFM Television.
"We are convinced, and he told us so, that
he will not talk and will use his right to remain silent. What can we do. I
have said it from the beginning, if my client remains silent, I drop his
defence," Berton said.
Berton said Abdeslam was refusing to talk
because of the 24-hours-a-day camera monitoring in his high-security jail,
conditions which the lawyers have repeatedly tried and failed to get changed.
"We have seen him slide away. Being
watched all the time, with infrared at night, that drives one crazy, and that
is a consequence of a political decision (to put Abdeslam on continuous
monitoring," he said.
Abdeslam's Belgian lawyer Sven Mary said the
solitary confinement was causing Abdeslam to clam up.
"The real victims of this are the victims
of the Paris attacks. They have a right to know," he said.
French authorities suspect Abdeslam, who fled
the scene but was captured later, of playing a part in the organisation of the
multiple machine gun and suicide bomb attacks on a music venue and bars in
Paris and at a football stadium on the edge of the city.
Abdeslam had been spirited out of France and
back to Belgium, his country of residence, by car in the hours after the
attacks. He was captured in Belgium and shipped to France earlier this year.
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