A trial in Paris has heard how Didier Francois, Edouard Elias, Nicolas Henin, and Pierre Torres were terrorised during their 10 months in captivity between June 2013 and April 2014.
News Ryan Carroll Reporter 09:56, 22 Mar 2025Updated 10:03, 22 Mar 2025

Beheaded Scots aid worker David Haines has been hailed after five jihadists were found guilty of holding French journalists captive for the terror group Islamic State.
A trial in Paris has heard how Didier Francois, Edouard Elias, Nicolas Henin, and Pierre Torres were terrorised during their 10 months in captivity between June 2013 and April 2014. One of the guilty jihadists, Mehdi Nemmouche, 39, was described by the prosecution as "one of the most perverse and cruel jihadists of the past 10 years" with a "total absence of empathy and remorse."
Article continues below
The four journalists spoke of relentless physical and psychological torture at the hands of ISIS. Asked how he managed to survive, Henin paid tribute to his fellow hostages Haines and James Foley who he says supported him mentally while he was detained.

Aid worker Haines, 44, from Perth, was beheaded in September, 2014, after he was kidnapped from a Syrian aid camp the previous year. Nemmouche spoke in the French court while continuing to deny holding the men captive hours before the verdict was due.
He said: "Yes, I was a terrorist, and I will never apologise for it. I don't regret a day, an hour, or an act." Nemmouche was sentenced to life in prison, and will serve a minimum of 22 years behind bars. Abdelmalek Tanem was given 22 years and Kais Al Abdullah was sentenced to 20 years. Meanwhile, Oussama Atar and Salim Benghalem, who are both referred to as integral figures in the Islamic State's operations and believed to be dead were sentenced to life in absentia.
During their imprisonment, the journalists were forced to watch the executions of other captives and endure beatings while surrounded by the screams of fellow detainees. Henin was snatched in the Syrian city of Raqqa with photographer Pierre Torres in 2013. He told Sky News he was just "taken off the streets".

During his time in captivity, he met Haines and American journalist Foley, both of whom were later murdered by the notorious British ISIS militants dubbed "the Beatles". Henin said: "We were a total of 24. Nineteen men held in one cell and five women in another one…and the plan was to start everything with an execution."
He remembers the first person executed on the day they arrived was a Russian man, but the murders would continue. At times, their captors also carried out mock executions, dragging their terrified prisoners out for fake beheadings or leaving them in the boiling sun for hours during mock crucifixions.
Henin said: "All our captors treated us badly. It is not only about beatings or torture; to keep someone captured in the dark sometimes blindfolded is enough."

Throughout the trial, Nemmouche has always denied being their jailer, but the four former hostages recognised him. Edouard Elias said he remembers him tormenting them for hours with constant chatter and singing French songs while Henin said he will never forget his face or his manner.
He said: "[He's] sadistic, narcissistic, and I would say 'gamer' because for him nothing is serious. Everything is a game. He wants to win everything…he plays with the court."
Nemmouche is already serving a life sentence for the fatal attack on the Jewish Museum in Brussels in May 2014. He carried out the killings for ISIS a few weeks after the French journalists were released.

Describing him as a "real sociopath", Prosecutor Benjamin Chambre said: "This man, who fancies himself intelligent, is devoid of any human sentiment."
Article continues below
Ahead of the verdict, Henin called for sentences that reflected the gravity of the crimes inflicted on them.
He added: "It's part of the game of terrorists to terrorise people. They need us to believe that they are not human. We have to look for the humanity still in them to prevent ourselves being totally petrified by fear facing them. I prevent myself from feeling any hatred against them as much as any fear."