Fabien Clain

Fabien Clain (born ca. 1977/1978) is a purported veteran jihadist loyal to ISIL. He holds French nationality and is of Réunionnais origin,[1] but has been described as being from Toulouse, the capital city of the southwestern French department of Haute-Garonne.[2]

Personal background

Clain converted to Islam in the 1990s. He appears to have been radicalized in the first half of the 2000s, with his younger brother Jean-Michel Clain. Imam Mamadou Daffé, who knew Clain before he was radicalized, recalled Clain as someone who was "nice, affable, smiling".

After living in the Netherlands from 2003,[3] in 2004, the Clain brothers went to Egypt with their wives[3] to study the Koran in the suburbs of Cairo.[4]

Clain and friends found themselves in a village to the south of Toulouse, Artigat, around a "guru", Olivier Corel, of Syrian origin. Corel, known as the 'white Emir', served as a "scholar in religion" for the group who met at his home.[1]

Clain reportedly had influence on the group that included brothers, Abdelkader and Mohamed Merah, and Sabri Essid. He created a prayer room in his home and preached hatred against Jews and Americans and urged jihad On 12 December 2006, two of his followers, Essid and Bala, were intercepted by the Syrian Army on the way to fight American troops in Iraq. After a few months of detention in Syria, they are handed over to the French.

2009 conviction

Members of this group were charged with terrorist offenses in 2009. Clain was presented as an "organizer" of a group and sentenced to five years in jail.[4] Group members Essid and Bala were also convicted, but Olivier Corel and Abdelkader Merah were acquitted.[1] Clain is banned from twenty-two French departments.[3]

Terrorist involvement

Clain was still in French prison in March 2012 when Mohamed Merah killed three soldiers as well as a professor and three children in a Jewish school. The two men corresponded by mail while in prison and Clain was accused of conspiracy in the scooter attack.[1] Clain appears to have gone to Syria after being released from French prison in 2014.[4]

In April 2015, Clain's name came up in the investigation of an planned attack on a church in Villejuif outside Paris.[1] The attack failed when the terrorist shot himself in the leg.[3] At some point before November 2015 Clain uttered threats against Bataclan due to the alleged Zionism of its [former] owners.[1]

Clain released an audio recording on the day before the November 2015 Paris attacks in which he personally claimed responsibility for the attacks.[5][3] This "is only the beginning of the storm and a warning for those who want to meditate and remove their lessons" (translation of the recording). The voice recording intonation is reported to be not aggressive but soft, rejoicing in the deaths at the 'idolatrous' at the concert hall and other locations.[1] However the recording mentions the 18th arrondissement district of Paris where no attack took place but a car linked to the attacks was found abandoned.[2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Fabien Clain, a veteran jihadist who had already threatened the Bataclan". Microsofttranslator.com. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  2. 1 2 Robinson, Martin (18 November 2015). "Fabien Clain believed to be voice behind ISIS Paris attacks message". Dailymail.co.uk. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Roisin O'Connor (17 November 2015). "Paris attacks: Voice in Isis propaganda is 'probably' French jihadist Fabien Clain". The Independent. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  4. 1 2 3 "Fabien Clain, the voice of the Islamic State". Microsofttranslator.com. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  5. Cruickshank, Paul (5 December 2015). "Senior official: ISIS eyes UK; Abdeslam trail is cold". Edition.cnn.com. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
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