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Juanjo MartinThe Associated Press Rabei Osman, front, one of 29 suspects in the March 11, 2004, train attacks, refused to answer questions Thursday from prosecutors. Many of the defendants in court wouldn't look at the victims' families, and some turned their backs to them.
Juanjo MartinThe Associated Press Rabei Osman, front, one of 29 suspects in the March 11, 2004, train attacks, refused to answer questions Thursday from prosecutors. Many of the defendants in court wouldn’t look at the victims’ families, and some turned their backs to them.
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Madrid, Spain – An Egyptian accused of being a mastermind of the Madrid train bombings told a court Thursday that he had no involvement in the deadly attack, despite wiretapped conversations in which he allegedly boasted he was the brains behind it.

The defendant, Rabei Osman, testified as the trial of 29 suspects opened. He is among three men accused of planning the bombings that tore through packed commuter trains March 11, 2004, killing 191 people and wounding more than 1,800 in Europe’s worst Islamic terror attack.

Osman refused to answer questions from prosecutors. Under questioning from his own attorney, he said he had nothing to do with the attack.

“I never had any relation to the events which occurred in Madrid,” he said in Arabic through a translator, adding that he condemned the bombings “unconditionally and completely.”

Osman was arrested in Italy in June 2004 on a warrant from Spanish authorities. Italian prosecutors have said they tapped phone conversations in which he told an associate in Italy: “I’m the thread to Madrid; it’s my work.”

On the stand Thursday, Osman denied being a member of al-Qaeda or any other Islamic extremist group and said he knew other alleged members of the Madrid bombing cell only as acquaintances at a mosque in the Spanish capital.

The trial has ignited painful memories of what Spaniards consider the nation’s most traumatic event since the 1930s civil war. Images of body bags and twisted train cars were replayed throughout the day on Spanish TV, a grim reminder of the devastation.

About 100 experts and 600 witnesses are likely to be called during the trial, among them people whose lives were shattered by the blasts. Testimony is expected to last more than five months, and a verdict is expected in late October.

“I hope justice is rendered and that there is a worthy sentence,” Pilar Manjon, president of an association of March 11 victims, said before the proceedings got underway. Her 20-year-old son was killed in the bombings.

Of the defendants, Manjon said: “I will look them right in the eye. They destroyed my life, but they will not destroy me.”

Eighteen of the suspects watched Thursday’s proceedings from a bulletproof chamber, while the 11 others, who are free on bond, sat in the main section of the courtroom. Many of the suspects in the chamber avoided looking at the victims’ relatives sitting in the courtroom, and some turned their backs to them.

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