The Niagara Falls Review

Attacker rams police with bomb-laden car

- ELAINE GANLEY and LORI HINNANT

PARIS — A man on the radar of French authoritie­s was killed Monday after ramming a car carrying explosives into a police vehicle in the capital’s Champs-Elysees shopping district, prompting a fiery blast, officials said.

No police officers or passersby were hurt, the Paris police department said. It is unclear why the attacker drove into police, though officials said the incident was apparently deliberate.

Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said the man was killed after an attempted attack on a police convoy, saying that shows the threat is still very high in the country and justifies a state of emergency in place since 2015.

He says the current situation in France shows a new security law “is needed” and the measure would “maintain a high security level.”

Two police officials said that a handgun was found on the driver, who they said was badly burned after the vehicle exploded. They identified the man as a 31-yearold man from the Paris suburb of Argenteuil who had an “S” file, meaning he was flagged for links to extremism.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to reveal details of the incident, the second this year on the city’s most famous avenue, which is popular with tourists from around the world.

On Monday, police cordoned off a broad swath of the ChampsElys­ees after the latest incident, warning people to avoid the area.

Interior Ministry spokesman Pierre-Henry Brandet said the incident was apparently deliberate.

Police “pulled an individual out of the vehicle who had struck the car in front (of the convoy,“Brandet told reporters. ”Large numbers of police converged on the scene, firefighte­rs to extinguish the fire.“

A man could be seen lying on his stomach on the ground immediatel­y after the incident, wearing a white shirt and dark shorts. Eric Favereau, a journalist for

Liberation newspaper who was driving a scooter behind the gendarmes, said he saw a car blocking the convoy’s path, then an implosion in the vehicle. Favereau wrote that the gendarmes smashed open the windows of the car while it was in flames and dragged out its occupant. Other gendarmes used fire extinguish­ers to put out the flames. The account didn’t say what happened to the occupant of the car afterward.

 ?? THOMAS SAMSON/GETTY IMAGES ?? Police officers patrol the Champs-Elysees in Paris on Monday, after a car crashed into a police van before bursting into flames.
THOMAS SAMSON/GETTY IMAGES Police officers patrol the Champs-Elysees in Paris on Monday, after a car crashed into a police van before bursting into flames.

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