Baku-APA. Charaffe al Mouadan, an Islamic State leader killed by air strikes in
In another dimension of the investigation into the Nov. 13 shooting and bombing rampage in Paris in which 130 people died, a source close to the inquiry confirmed a report that said at least one man was suspected of having coordinated the attacks from Belgium via mobile phone as they were being carried out.
The disclosures helped flesh out a picture of the
Al Mouadan, 26, was close to
Both had plans to get to
"They were arrested in 2012 when they planned to leave for
"He (al Mouadan) was the first to leave for
The source close to the investigation, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed the link between al Mouadan and Amimour and said one could assume Mouadan also knew Ismail Omar Mostefai, a Frenchman of Algerian descent who was another of the attackers of the Bataclan concert hall and died there.
The source confirmed that both Mouadan and Amimour had dodged police check-ins and that Mouadan left first for
"The question of his (al Mouadan's) possible role in the Nov. 13 attacks remains. Since he was in contact with Amimour, all questions must be raised," the source said.U.S. Army Colonel Steve Warren had said on Tuesday that al Mouadan was killed on an air strike in Syria on Dec. 24, one of 10 Islamic State leaders killed in U.S.-led strikes over the past month, and that he was directly associated with Abdelhamid Abaaoud, suspected ringleader of the Paris attacks.