Khalid al-Barnawi, one of three Nigerians listed by the US government as a "specially designated global terrorist", appeared in court alongside six other defendants and denied the charges.
The charges relate to a series of kidnappings and killings of foreign workers between 2011 and 2013, including Italian engineer Franco Lamolinara and his British colleague Chris McManus.
Both were killed by their captors in the northern city of Sokoto just after the start of a joint British-Nigerian rescue operation at the compound where they were being held in March 2012.
Collomp was kidnapped in December 2012 and held by Ansaru for nearly a year before he managed to stage a dramatic escape in November 2013.
Raupach's abduction was initially claimed by Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) to which Ansaru has been linked. He was killed during a military raid in Kano, northern Nigeria, in May 2012.
The other kidnapping and murder charges relate to seven foreign nationals -- two from Lebanon, two Syrians, an Italian, a Greek and a Briton.
They were seized from a construction site in the northern state of Bauchi in 2013.
Halima Haliru, Barnawi's second wife, faces only one charge -- failing to disclose information about acts of terrorism.
Nigeria's military announced in April last year that Barnawi -- who is also known as Mohammed Usman -- had been arrested in Lokoja in central Nigeria.
He was described as "on top of the list of our wanted terrorists" because of his alleged links to the wider jihadist network in west and north Africa.
Both Barnawi and Kambar were former close allies of Boko Haram founder Mohammed Yusuf, who was killed in police custody in 2009, which then saw his deputy Abubakar Shekau take over.
Under Shekau's leadership, at least 20,000 people have been killed and more than 2.6 million forced from their homes.
Ansaru, whose members trained in AQIM camps in the Algerian desert, broke away in protest at Shekau's indiscriminate violence and targeting of civilians.
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