Jewish museum suspect Nemmouche says was 'tricked'

Mr Nemmouche's lawyer claims Iran or Lebanon could have been behind the attack

(FILES) A court sketch made on January 10, 2019 shows Mehdi Nemmouche (C), accused of the terrorist attack at the Jewish Museum in Brussels in 2014, during his trial at the Brussels Justice Palace. The court will render its verdict on March 7, 2019 during the trial od Mehdi Nemmouche, 33, who faces a life sentence if convicted of the killings in the Belgian capital on May 24, 2014, following his return from Syria's battlefields.    - 
 / AFP / Benoit PEYRUCQ
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A suspected extremist insisted Tuesday that he's innocent of terrorism charges over the 2014 killing of four people at Belgium's Jewish museum, as the jury in his trial prepared to consider its verdict.

Weeks after telling the Brussels criminal court that he would reveal the truth "when the time is right," Mehdi Nemmouche on Tuesday said only that he was "trapped" into involvement in the slaying.

"If I could change things, I would change everything," the 33-year-old Frenchman, wearing a black shirt and top and flanked by police officers in ski masks, said in remarks lasting less than 20 seconds.

Mr Nemmouche is charged with four counts of 'terrorist murder' over the killing of an Israeli couple and two staffers at the Brussels Jewish Museum. His alleged accomplice, Nacer Bendrer, 30, stands accused of supplying the revolver and assault rifle used in the shooting.

Prosecutors claim that Mr Nemmouche trained and fought with ISIS in Syria. The museum shooting compounded fears that European extremists would use combat experience from places like Syria or Iraq to sow terror back home.

The 12-member jury is set to hand down its verdict on Thursday. In a secret ballot, the jury must decide by a majority vote whether Mr Nemmouche is guilty. He will likely be sentenced on Friday, and could face up to 30 years in prison.

Whatever the verdict, Mr Nemmouche would remain in prison as he must face charges in France of taking hostages in Syria.

For most of the trial, Mr Nemmouche has exercised his right to silence, but on Tuesday he urged the jury not to take that silence as "disrespect."

In more than six hours of case summary last week, defence lawyer Sebastien Courtoy argued that Iranian or Lebanese security officials were behind the killings, and that one, or both, of the murdered Israelis could have been Mossad agents.

Michele Hirsch, a lawyer for the Coordination Committee of Jewish Organisations in Belgium, described Mr Courtoy's summary as "hallucinatory, delirious, completely incoherent."

In his final remarks to the jury on Monday, Mr Courtoy said: "It's impossible for you not to have some doubt. For me, it's just not possible."

"It might feel more comfortable for you to condemn him," he said. "But if you think he's innocent, please, don't be afraid to say it."

Addressing the jury, Mr Nemmouche's co-accused, Mr Bendrer said: "Today I'm scared, I didn't do anything. But I'm scared. I say to myself, maybe they didn't understand."