The sole surviving ISIS extremist who helped carry out the Paris 2015 attacks has told a court he is not a killer.
Salah Abdeslam pleaded for leniency during his final appearance in court on Monday.
Twenty people are on trial in France for their alleged parts in the attacks, including Mr Abdeslam, who was detained after his explosive vest failed to detonate.
Mr Abdeslam apologised to victims on Monday, saying his remorse and sorrow for the 130 people killed and more than 400 wounded was heartfelt and sincere.
“Who can make an insincere apology for so much suffering?” he said. He acknowledged he had made mistakes, but declared: “I am not a murderer, I am not a killer.”
He is a lead figure in the court case over the November 13 attack on Paris, France’s deadliest peacetime assault.
French prosecutors demanded a life sentence without a possibility of parole for Mr Abdeslam.
During closing arguments on Monday, Mr Abdelslam’s lawyer Olivia Ronan told a panel of judges that her client is the only one in the group of attackers who did not set off explosives that night and therefore he cannot be convicted for murder.
“If a life sentence without hope for ever experiencing freedom again is pronounced, I fear we have lost a sense of proportion,” Ms Ronan said.
Mr Abdeslam is on trial with 19 other men accused of playing critical support roles in the massacres in the Bataclan music hall, nearby cafes and at the national stadium.
He has been charged with several counts of murder, complicity to murder, belonging to a terrorist organisation and taking part in a conspiracy to commit murder and kidnapping as a member of a terrorist organisation.
A verdict in the historic trial is expected on Wednesday.
The accused has said that he disabled the explosive vest and had renounced his mission but police said the vest was faulty.
He told the court how he tried to reach friends and ask for help and that he took a taxi across Paris to Montrouge. He hid out at first near Paris and then fled with friends to Brussels, where he was arrested four months later.
Since the trial opened in September, he has made a few outbursts of bravado, but refused to answer most questions.
In April, his words started flowing and he gave evidence over several days that at times contradicted earlier statements, including on his loyalty to ISIS.
Mr Abdeslam, a French citizen of Moroccan descent, was born and raised in Belgium, where he graduated from technical school.
They have emphasised contradictions in Mr Abdeslam’s testimony — from pledging allegiance to ISIS at the start of the trial and expressing regret that the explosives failed to detonate to claiming he had changed his mind and deliberately disabled the explosives strapped to his body because he did not want to kill people who were “singing and dancing”.
Not everyone is an extremist, prosecutor Nicolas Braconnay told the court earlier this month, "but all of those you are judging accepted to take part in a terrorist group, either by conviction, cowardliness or greed".
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Iran has sent five planeloads of food to Qatar, which is suffering shortages amid a regional blockade.
A number of nations, including Iran's major rival Saudi Arabia, last week cut ties with Qatar, accusing it of funding terrorism, charges it denies.
The land border with Saudi Arabia, through which 40% of Qatar's food comes, has been closed.
Meanwhile, mediators Kuwait said that Qatar was ready to listen to the "qualms" of its neighbours.
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Huddersfield Town permanent signings:
- Steve Mounie (striker): signed from Montpellier for £11 million
- Tom Ince (winger): signed from Derby County for £7.7m
- Aaron Mooy (midfielder): signed from Manchester City for £7.7m
- Laurent Depoitre (striker): signed from Porto for £3.4m
- Scott Malone (defender): signed from Fulham for £3.3m
- Zanka (defender): signed from Copenhagen for £2.3m
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Sheikh Zayed's poem
When it is unveiled at Abu Dhabi Art, the Standing Tall exhibition will appear as an interplay of poetry and art. The 100 scarves are 100 fragments surrounding five, figurative, female sculptures, and both sculptures and scarves are hand-embroidered by a group of refugee women artisans, who used the Palestinian cross-stitch embroidery art of tatreez. Fragments of Sheikh Zayed’s poem Your Love is Ruling My Heart, written in Arabic as a love poem to his nation, are embroidered onto both the sculptures and the scarves. Here is the English translation.
Your love is ruling over my heart
Your love is ruling over my heart, even a mountain can’t bear all of it
Woe for my heart of such a love, if it befell it and made it its home
You came on me like a gleaming sun, you are the cure for my soul of its sickness
Be lenient on me, oh tender one, and have mercy on who because of you is in ruins
You are like the Ajeed Al-reem [leader of the gazelle herd] for my country, the source of all of its knowledge
You waddle even when you stand still, with feet white like the blooming of the dates of the palm
Oh, who wishes to deprive me of sleep, the night has ended and I still have not seen you
You are the cure for my sickness and my support, you dried my throat up let me go and damp it
Help me, oh children of mine, for in his love my life will pass me by.
Dubai works towards better air quality by 2021
Dubai is on a mission to record good air quality for 90 per cent of the year – up from 86 per cent annually today – by 2021.
The municipality plans to have seven mobile air-monitoring stations by 2020 to capture more accurate data in hourly and daily trends of pollution.
These will be on the Palm Jumeirah, Al Qusais, Muhaisnah, Rashidiyah, Al Wasl, Al Quoz and Dubai Investment Park.
“It will allow real-time responding for emergency cases,” said Khaldoon Al Daraji, first environment safety officer at the municipality.
“We’re in a good position except for the cases that are out of our hands, such as sandstorms.
“Sandstorms are our main concern because the UAE is just a receiver.
“The hotspots are Iran, Saudi Arabia and southern Iraq, but we’re working hard with the region to reduce the cycle of sandstorm generation.”
Mr Al Daraji said monitoring as it stood covered 47 per cent of Dubai.
There are 12 fixed stations in the emirate, but Dubai also receives information from monitors belonging to other entities.
“There are 25 stations in total,” Mr Al Daraji said.
“We added new technology and equipment used for the first time for the detection of heavy metals.
“A hundred parameters can be detected but we want to expand it to make sure that the data captured can allow a baseline study in some areas to ensure they are well positioned.”