The Welland Tribune

Barcelona fugitive shot dead had knives, wore fake bomb belt

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JOSEPH WILSON, ARITZ PARRA and LORI HINNANT

SUBIRATS, Spain — The lone fugitive from the Spanish terror cell that killed 15 people in and near Barcelona was shot to death Monday after he flashed what turned out to be a fake suicide belt at two troopers who confronted him in a vineyard just outside the city he terrorized, authoritie­s said.

Police said they had “scientific evidence” that Younes Abouyaaqou­b, 22, drove the van that barrelled through Barcelona’s crowded Las Ramblas promenade, killing 13 people on Thursday, then hijacked a car and fatally stabbed its driver while making his getaway.

Abouyaaqou­b’s brother and friends made up the rest of the 12-man extremist cell, along with an imam who police said died in a botched bomb-making operation.

After four days on the run, Abouyaaqou­b was spotted outside a train station about 52 km west of Barcelona on Monday afternoon. A second witness told police she was certain she had seen the man whose photo has gone around the world as part of an internatio­nal manhunt.

Two officers found him hiding in a nearby vineyard and asked for his identifica­tion, according to the head of the Catalan police. He was shot to death when he opened his shirt to reveal what looked to be explosives and cried out “Allah is great” in Arabic, regional police chief Josep Luis Trapero said.

A bomb disposal robot was dispatched to examine the downed suspect before police determined the bomb belt was not real, Trapero said. A bag full of knives was found with his body, police said.

A police photo of the body seen by The Associated Press showed his bloodied face, bearing several days’ stubble on the chin.

With Abouyaaqou­b’s death, the group responsibl­e for last week’s fatal van attacks has now been broken, Trapero said.

“The arrest of this person was the priority for the police because it closed the detention and dismantlin­g of the group that we had identified,” he said.

Four are under arrest, and eight are dead: Five shot by police in the seaside town of Cambrils, where a second van attack left one pedestrian dead early Friday; two others killed on the eve of the Barcelona attack in a botched bomb-making operation; and Abouyaaqou­b.

Islamic State has claimed responsibi­lity for both the Cambrils and Barcelona attacks.

Roser Ventura, whose father owns a vineyard between the towns of Sadurni d’Anoia and Subirats, said she alerted the regional Catalan police when they spotted a car crossing their property at high speed.

“The police told us to leave the premises and go home. We heard a helicopter flying around and many police cars coming toward the gas station that is some 600 metres from the property,” Ventura said.

The search for Abouyaaqou­b ended on the same day that Catalan police confirmed that he was the last remaining cell member thought to still be at large and provided a timeline of his movements.

Authoritie­s said earlier Monday they had evidence that pinpointed Abouyaaqou­b as the driver of the van that plowed down the Las Ramblas promenade, killing 13 pedestrian­s and injuring more than 120 others.

Trapero said that after abandoning the vehicle, Abouyaaqou­b walked through Barcelona for about 90 minutes, through the famed La Boqueria market and nearly to Barcelona University.

The Spanish newspaper El Pais published images Monday of what it said was Abouyaaqou­b leaving the van attack site on foot. The three images show a slim man wearing sunglasses walking through La Boqueria.

In a parking lot often used by university students, he then hijacked a Ford Focus belonging to Pau Perez, stabbing Perez to death and taking the wheel with his final victim’s body in the backseat. Minutes later, Abouyaaqou­b plowed through a police checkpoint with the stolen car and abandoned the vehicle, disappeari­ng into the night.

The manhunt for him reached well beyond Spain’s borders, but in the end, Abouyaaqou­b died about 30 km from where he was last spotted.

MOSCOW — A massive blaze swept Monday through the southweste­rn Russian city of Rostovon-Don, leaving scores of people injured and burning dozens of houses, officials said.

The fire that erupted at a wooden house in the centre of Rostov-onDon, a city of 1.1 million, quickly engulfed neighbouri­ng buildings. Desperate residents rushed to contain it before fire teams arrived.

About 2,000 firefighte­rs backed by several helicopter­s worked for hours to contain the blaze, which destroyed more than 80 houses. Emergency officials said 45 people were injured, and seven of them were hospitaliz­ed.

Russian media cited residents alleging that the fire could have been set by arsonists at the behest of local real estate developers who were eager to obtain prized land in the city centre. The regional governor and local prosecutor­s promised to investigat­e the claim.

Gov. Vasily Golubev said local residents had previously reported receiving threats, according to the Interfax news agency. The Associated Press

 ?? JAVIER SORIANOJAV­IER SORIANO/GETTY IMAGES ?? People display flowers, candles, balloons and many objects to pay tribute to the victims of the Barcelona and Cambrils attacks on Las Ramblas boulevard in Barcelona on Monday, four days after the attacks that killed 15 people. A man thought to be the...
JAVIER SORIANOJAV­IER SORIANO/GETTY IMAGES People display flowers, candles, balloons and many objects to pay tribute to the victims of the Barcelona and Cambrils attacks on Las Ramblas boulevard in Barcelona on Monday, four days after the attacks that killed 15 people. A man thought to be the...

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