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CRIME

Spain prosecutors want church attack suspect jailed for 50 years

Prosecutors want the Moroccan man suspected of staging last year's machete attack on two Spanish churches, killing a church official, to face 50 years behind bars, court documents showed Friday.

Spain prosecutors want church attack suspect jailed for 50 years
Spain prosecutors want church attack suspect jailed for 50 years. Photo: CRISTINA QUICLER / AFP

The suspect, Yassine Kanjaa, 26, is charged with terrorist murder for killing the sacristan, prosecutors wrote in the document, a copy of which was seen by AFP.

He is also charged with attempted terrorist murder with injury for his attack on two other people, one a priest, they wrote.

The attacks took place in the southern port town of Algeciras on January 25th, 2023, when the suspect “took a large machete” and entered San Isidro church, badly wounding a priest before entering a second where he chased the sacristan and killed him.

He tried to enter a third but the door was locked and police at the scene arrested him.

In the months before the attack, the suspect had “undergone a process of radicalisation, taking on board the most stringent Islamic theories which uphold its incompatibility with the principles and values of other religions and the need to act to eliminate them”, they wrote.

“The suspect chose where to act” and attacked both the priest and the sacristan “with the intention of killing them… and terrorising Christians”, the document said.

On the day of the attack, the suspect “presented as having a psychotic disorder with delusions and likely schizophrenia”, prosecutors wrote. But they judged his intellectual capabilities “were not completely eroded by his condition”.

After his arrest, police described Kanjaa as “unstable” and he was sent for a psychiatric evaluation to assess whether or not he could be charged.

The authorities said he had never been “on the radar” of the security forces in Spain or elsewhere for radicalisation, although he had been served with a deportation order in June 2021, which had never been carried out.

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CRIME

Pensioner letter bomb suspect goes on trial in Spain

A pensioner who allegedly sent letter bombs to Spain's prime minister and the US and Ukrainian embassies in 2022 went on trial Monday, facing 22 years behind bars if convicted.

Pensioner letter bomb suspect goes on trial in Spain

Pompeyo González Pascual, a man in his mid-70s from northern Spain, is facing charges of terrorism and manufacturing explosives for sending letter bombs to six addresses in late 2022.

Gonzalez Pascual listened as the charges were read out at Madrid’s Audiencia Nacional, Spain’s top criminal court.

The trial will run until Thursday.

According to the indictment, the suspect was opposed to Madrid and Washington’s support for Ukraine following Russia’s February 2022 invasion and “sought to change those positions and cause a profound upheaval in Spanish society”.

The devices were sent to Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, Defence Minister Margarita Robles, the US and Ukrainian embassies, a Spanish arms firm that makes grenades donated to Ukraine and a major Spanish military base.

A Ukrainian embassy staffer sustained light injuries while opening one of the packages. The other packages were intercepted by security staff.

An expert who examined his computer told the court they found evidence of “searches for how to prepare explosive devices” and of his visiting “media propaganda channels related to the Russia-Ukraine conflict”.

Gonzalez Pascual was arrested in January 2023 and put in pre-trial detention but a judge granted him conditional release last month on grounds he wasn’t in a position to destroy evidence or likely to reoffend, and had no previous convictions.

At the time, the judge said there were “no indications” he had acted in conjunction with “any organised terror group”.

His arrest came after a New York Times report said US and European investigators believed Russian military intelligence officers had “directed” associates of a Russia-based white supremacist group to carry out the Spain campaign.

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