Lethbridge Herald

Three die in church attack

KILLER ENTERED FRANCE FROM ITALY

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A young Tunisian man armed with a knife and carrying a copy of the Qur’an attacked worshipper­s in a French church and killed three Thursday, prompting the government to raise its security alert to the maximum level hours before a nationwide coronaviru­s lockdown.

The attack in Mediterran­ean city of Nice was the third in less than two months that French authoritie­s have attributed to Muslim extremists, including the beheading of a teacher who had shown caricature­s of the Prophet Muhammad in class after the images were republishe­d by a satirical newspaper targeted in a 2015 attack.

Thursday’s attacker was seriously wounded by police and hospitaliz­ed in lifethreat­ening condition after the killings at the Notre Dame Basilica. The imposing edifice is located half a mile (less than a kilometre) from the site where another attacker plowed a truck into a crowd on France’s national day in 2016, killing dozens.

President Emmanuel Macron said he would immediatel­y increase the number of soldiers deployed to protect schools and religious sites from around 3,000 to 7,000.

France’s anti-terrorism prosecutor said the suspect is a Tunisian born in 1999 who reached the Italian island of Lanpedusa, a key landing point for migrants crossing in boats from North Africa, on Sept. 20 and travelled to Paris on Oct. 9. Prosecutor Jean-Francois Ricard did not specify when he arrived in Nice.

The prosecutor said the attacker was not on the radar of intelligen­ce agencies as a potential threat.

Video cameras recorded the man entering the Nice train station at 6:47 a.m., where he changed his shoes and turned his coat inside out before heading for the church, some 400 metres (yards) away, just before 8:30 a.m.

Ricard said the attacker was carrying a copy of Islam’s holy book and two telephones. A knife with a 17-centimetre blade used in the attack was found near him along with a bag containing another two knives that were not used in the attack.

He had spent some 30 minutes inside the church before police arrived via a side entrance and “after advancing down a corridor they came face-to-face with (the attacker) whom they neutralize­d,” Ricard said.

Witnesses heard the man crying ”Allahu Akbar” as he advanced on police. Police initially used an electric gun then fired their service revolvers. Ricard said 14 bullet casings were found on the ground.

Ricard detailed a gruesome scene inside the church where two of the victims died. A 60year-old woman suffered “a very deep throat slitting, like a decapitati­on,” he said, and a 55-year-old man also suffered deep, fatal throat cuts. The third victim, a 44-year-old woman, managed to flee the church alive but died at a nearby restaurant.

The three were killed “only because they were in the church at that moment,” Ricard told reporters. He said investigat­ors are looking for potential complicity in the “complex” probe.

An investigat­ion was opened for murder and attempted murder in connection with a terrorist enterprise, a common term for such crimes.

The attack in Nice came amid a fierce debate in France and beyond over the republicat­ion of the Muhammad caricature­s by satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo.

The French consulate in the Saudi city of Jiddah was also targeted Thursday, a man claiming allegiance to an antiimmigr­ant group was shot and killed by police in the southern French city of Avignon, and scattered confrontat­ions were reported elsewhere, but it is unclear whether they were linked to the attack in Nice.

France’s national police chief had already ordered increased security at churches and mosques earlier this week, but no police appeared to be guarding the Nice church when it was attacked, and Associated Press reporters saw no visible security forces at multiple prominent religious sites in Paris on Thursday.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? A man prays in the street outside the Notre Dame church in Nice, southern France, after a knife attack took place on Thursday. An attacker armed with a knife killed three people at a church in the Mediterran­ean city of Nice, prompting the prime minister to announce that France was raising its security alert status to the highest level.
Associated Press photo A man prays in the street outside the Notre Dame church in Nice, southern France, after a knife attack took place on Thursday. An attacker armed with a knife killed three people at a church in the Mediterran­ean city of Nice, prompting the prime minister to announce that France was raising its security alert status to the highest level.

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