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Düsseldorf court jails German jihadi

December 10, 2018

A 37-year-old German national has been sentenced to six years in prison after spending five years with the Taliban in southern Afghanistan. He was found criminally liable, despite claiming to have mental health problems.

https://p.dw.com/p/39ntb
The 37-year-old convicted man in court
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/R. Vennenbernd

A Düsseldorf court on Monday found a 37-year-old German man guilty of fighting for the Taliban and sentenced him to six years in prison.

Thomas K., a Polish-born German who grew up in the Worms area of Rhineland-Palatinate, was captured by US and German special forces in southern Afghanistan in February. He was brought to Germany in April.

Read more: German Taliban fighter on trial in Dusseldorf

Thomas K., who can not be named under German media protocols, was also charged with attempted murder for firing a mortar grenade at an Afghan army camp. But the Düsseldorf High District Court ruled that charge was unfulfilled.

Before the ruling, Thomas W. confessed that he traveled to Pakistan in 2012 and fought with the Taliban for five years. Prosecutors accused him during the trial of being a member of the Taliban's "Red Unit," which specializes in suicide attacks. In the unit, he spied on targets and built bombs.

A bomb blast at a funeral ceremony in Afghanistan in 2017
A bomb blast at a funeral ceremony in Afghanistan in 2017Image: Getty Images/AFP/N. Shirzada

The defendant, who said he converted to Islam at age 17 after the death of his father, also confessed to suffering from "schizophrenia and depressive episodes." Psychiatric experts said his mental issues neither "diminished" or "revoked" his criminal liability.

The trial, which began in mid-October, was held in a sealed-off high-security wing a few kilometers away from the court's main building.

dv/jm (AFP, dpa)

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