The Free Press Journal

Car rams into soldiers outside Paris, 6 injured

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French police launched a manhunt today after a car rammed into soldiers near their barracks outside Paris, injuring six people, two of them seriously.

Police were scrambling to track down the vehicle, which took off after the incident described by local mayor Patrick Balkany as “without a doubt a deliberate act”. The incident took place at about 8:00 am (0600 GMT) outside a military barracks in the northweste­rn Paris suburb of Levallois-Perret. Balkany told the all-news channel BFMTV that the car “accelerate­d very fast when they (soldiers) were coming out” of the barracks.

France has been under a state of emergency since November 2015 and has seen a string of attacks on security forces, particular­ly those guarding key tourist sites.

On Saturday an 18-yearold with a history of psychologi­cal problems was arrested on Saturday at the Eiffel Tower after brandishin­g a knife and shouting “Allahu Akbar” (God is Greatest). He told investigat­ors he wanted to kill a soldier, sources close to the case told AFP.

In the bloodiest attack targeting France, 130 people were killed in a wave of shootings and bombings in Paris on November 13, 2015, in carnage claimed by the Islamic State group (IS).

In January 2015, two brothers who had vowed allegiance to Al-Qaeda gunned down 12 people at satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo in Paris.

France is part of the USled internatio­nal coalition fighting IS and has carried out air strikes against the extremist group in Syria.

In February, a man armed with a machete attacked four soldiers on patrol at Paris’s Louvre Museum, while in April another extremist shot and killed a policeman on the Champs Elysees.

In June, a 40-year-old Algerian doctorate student who had pledged allegiance to IS attacked a policeman with a hammer outside Notre Dame cathedral.

The attacks have taken a serious toll on tourism to France, the world’s top tourist destinatio­n, but the industry has begun to recover as incidents have become more widespread and generally less deadly.

With terror attacks hitting not just France but also Belgium, Britain and Germany, potential travellers show “a kind of fatalism”, said Josette Sicsic, head of Touriscopi­e, a firm that tracks tourist behaviour.

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