The Province

3 dead in France shooting

Massacre at Strasbourg Christmas fair

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STRASBOURG, France — Three people died and 12 others were wounded in France when a man flagged as a possible extremist sprayed gunfire near the city of Strasbourg’s famous Christmas market Tuesday, sparking a search for the shooter and French officials to put the country on increased alert for terror attacks.

French prosecutor­s said a terrorism investigat­ion was opened, though authoritie­s did not say what they thought to be a motive.

Strasbourg is home to the European Parliament, one of several places locked down after the shooting and those inside prevented from leaving.

It was unclear if the market — the nucleus of an al-Qaida-linked plot in 2000 — was the intended target.

The assailant got inside a security zone around the venue and opened fire from there, Mayor Roland Ries said on BFM TV.

Two years ago, a Tunisian man drove a hijacked truck into a busy Berlin Christmas market, an attack that killed 12 people.

Strasbourg, which promotes itself as the “Capital of Christmas,” is on France’s border with Germany, about 500 km east of Paris.

Authoritie­s said they identified the attacker in Tuesday’s bloodshed and that he had a criminal record.

The prefect of the Strasbourg region said the alleged shooter also was on a watch list of potentiall­y radicalize­d individual­s.

No other details about him were disclosed.

Gendarmes went to the man’s home to arrest him before the attack, but he wasn’t there, Stephane Morisse of police union FGP said.

They found explosive materials during a search, he said.

France, where most of Europe’s worst terror attacks of recent years took place, is raising its terror alert level and sending security reinforcem­ents to Strasbourg, Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said early Wednesday.

Some 350 security forces and two helicopter­s were involved in the search for the alleged assailant, who had been radicalize­d for “several years” and confronted law enforcemen­t officers twice while he “sowed terror” in Strasbourg, Castaner said.

The death toll stood at three early Wednesday, he said.

Two police union officials said earlier there were four victims.

Officials didn’t explain the conflictin­g numbers.

A dozen more people were wounded, half of them who were in “absolute emergency” critical condition, Castaner said.

The alleged shooter was shot and wounded as well, by soldiers guarding the Christmas market, according to Morisse.

French military Col. Patrik Steiger said the shooter didn’t seem to be aiming for the soldiers patrolling in and around the market, but appeared to target civilians instead.

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