Arab Times

Notre Dame ‘attacker’ pledged IS allegiance

New ‘counter-terror’ force

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PARIS, June 7, (Agencies): A man who attacked a policeman with a hammer outside Notre Dame cathedral in Paris had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group in a video, it emerged Wednesday, four days after an attack claimed by IS in London.

The 40-year-old man was shot and wounded by police on Tuesday after lunging at the officer in a square full of tourists in front of the cathedral.

The attack, which came with France on high alert after jihadists killed seven people in London on Saturday, caused panic at one of the country’s top visitor attraction­s. Around 1,000 people were in the cathedral at the time.

The video in which the man pledges allegiance to IS was found by police who searched the apartment he was renting in Cergy outside the French capital, the source said.

During the attack, the man had shouted “this is for Syria”, Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said.

France is part of the US-led internatio­nal coalition fighting IS and has carried out air strikes against militants in Syria.

Documents found on the attacker identified him as a 40-year-old Algerian student doing a doctorate on the media at a university in eastern France. He had also been carrying kitchen knives, the interior minister said.

Macron

The man was on Wednesday placed in custody in hospital, where he is being treated for a gunshot wound to the chest.

Government spokesman Christophe Castaner said the man had “never showed any sign of radicalisa­tion” before the attack.

The 22-year-old police officer sustained minor neck injuries in the assault.

A witness told AFP he had heard someone “shout very loudly”.

“Then there was a crowd surge and people panicked. I heard two shots and saw a man lying on the ground in a pool of blood,” he said.

Meanwhile, France created a new counter-terrorism task force on Wednesday, bringing together all the intelligen­ce services, to coordinate the response to attacks, a day after an Algerian student assaulted police officers outside Notre Dame cathedral.

Macron, portrayed by rivals as weak on security during the presidenti­al campaign, ordered the task force to be set up last month to steer France’s multiple security agencies from his Elysee Palace offices.

The performanc­e of France’s intelligen­ce services has come under close scrutiny since the November 2015 attacks on Paris, when militant gunmen and suicide bombers struck entertainm­ent venues across the capital, killing 130 people.

PARIS:

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Also:

French President Emmanuel Macron’s party is on course to win a commanding majority in this month’s parliament­ary election, an IFOP poll showed on Wednesday, reinforcin­g the trend seen in other surveys also pointing to a victory for Macron’s camp.

The IFOP poll said Macron’s centrist Republic on the Move (LREM) party would get between 350-380 seats, out of 577 up for grabs, in the lower house of parliament. Voting takes place in two rounds on June 11 and June 18.

Earlier this week, an Ipsos Sopra Steria poll indicated that Macron’s party would get 385-415 seats in a landslide win.

Such a majority would give Macron’s government a strong mandate to push ahead with economic reforms, starting with a pro-business overhaul of France’s labour code, a notoriousl­y difficult area of policy to agree with trade unions.

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