A French court today ordered the extradition to Belgium of a man suspected of carrying out a deadly shooting at the Jewish Museum in Brussels on May 24 that killed four people.
The court in Versailles, west of Paris, said Franco-Algerian Mehdi Nemmouche, 29, who was detained several days after the attack, should be handed over to Belgian authorities for "killings with a terrorist connotation."
The decision was in line with a European warrant issued for Nemmouche's arrest.
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Nemmouche, who had spent more than a year fighting with radical jihadists in Syria, did not show any emotion at the verdict.
He was arrested on May 30 in the southern city of Marseille in a bus coming from Brussels during a random check by customs officials.
A revolver and Kalashnikov rifle were found in his luggage - similar weapons to those used in the shooting - as was a portable camera.
A Jewish couple was killed in the shooting, as was a French woman and Belgian man.