Twenty people implicated in a deadly attack on the US embassy in the Tunisian capital last year insisted they were innocent as their trial opened today.
Hundreds of angry Islamist protesters attacked the US mission in Tunis on September 14 after an American-made film mocking their religion was published on the Internet.
Four of the assailants were killed and dozens wounded in the violence, which saw protesters storm the embassy and torch a neighbouring American school.
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Defence lawyers strongly criticised the trial and demanded the charges be dropped, saying the process was a result of the Tunisian judiciary bowing to pressure from the West.
"These protests were part of a spontaneous reaction throughout the (Muslim) world against attacks on our sacred symbols," said one of them, Slah Barakati.
"These Tunisians are in court to please the United States and the European Union," he told the judge.
Another lawyer criticised the "confessions extracted by the police under pressure and threats".
The government has accused Saif Allah Bin Hussein, a former Al-Qaeda fighter in Afghanistan known as Abu Iyadh who heads Tunisia's main Salafist movement Ansar al-Sharia, of orchestrating the embassy attack.
Abu Iyadh has been on the run from the police since September, but none of the movement's leaders have been tried for the embassy attack.
Tunisia has been rocked by waves of violence blamed on radical Islamists since the 2011 revolution that overthrew the regime of strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.
Earlier this month one person was killed and about 20 wounded in clashes between police and Ansar al-Sharia supporters.