Kuwait Times

Paris knife rampage probe handed to French anti-terrorist prosecutor

Stabbing spree sent shock waves through an embattled police force

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PARIS: French detectives on Friday referred the investigat­ion into a knife rampage by a staffer at Paris police headquarte­rs that left four colleagues dead to anti-terrorist prosecutor­s, sources said. Three police officers and an administra­tive worker — three men and a woman — died in the frenzied 30-minute attack on Thursday at the police headquarte­rs, a stone’s throw from the NotreDame cathedral in the historic heart of Paris.

The assailant, a 45-year-old computer expert, was eventually shot dead by police. Two other people were injured in the Thursday lunchtime stabbing spree that sent shock waves through an embattled French police force already complainin­g of low morale. Sources at the Paris prosecutor’s office, which had been handling the inquiry, said on Friday that the case had been passed to the anti-terrorist prosecutor’s office (PNAT).

The attacker, named as Mickael H, was born on the French overseas territory of Martinique in the Caribbean. He was partially deaf. Preliminar­y enquiries suggest that the attacker, a convert to Islam, could have become radicalize­d, said sources, who added that he had worked in a section of the police service dedicated to collecting informatio­n on jihadist radicaliza­tion.

He had worked for the police since 2003 without ever arousing suspicion. But his wife, who is being questioned by police, claimed he had behaved in an “unusual and agitated” manner the night before the attack, sources said. Investigat­ors were examining text messages between him and his wife, whose detention was extended on Friday.

A ‘quiet person’

A search of the couple’s house in a low-income Paris suburb near Charles de Gaulle airport yielded no evidence that the man, who became a Muslim about 18 months ago, had been motivated by radical religious ideology, one source added. Computer equipment seized in the search was still being examined. AFP correspond­ents saw investigat­ors — faces concealed by balaclavas — lead out from the house late Thursday a man and a woman who hid behind hoods.

One motive investigat­ive sources mooted was a personal conflict at work. “He complained to me that his career had not evolved, due to his handicap,” said Abdelaziz, the deputy head of a local Muslim organisati­on who attended the Gonesse mosque with the attacker. Locals said the man had two children aged three and nine. “He was a very quiet person. I used to see him going to the mosque but he practiced (his religion) in a normal way,” a neighbor, who asked not to be named, told AFP.

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said Thursday the assailant had “never shown any behavioral problems” and never aroused the “slightest reason for alarm”. The man used a kitchen knife to stab two policemen and a male administra­tive colleague in two offices on the first floor of the building before attacking two women on the staircase on his way to the courtyard outside. One was a police officer who died at the scene. The other, an administra­tive worker, was seriously injured. The assailant wounded another policeman in the courtyard before he was shot in the head by a colleague, sources told AFP.

‘One of us’

Tension has been growing in police ranks, stretched to the limit after months of weekly “yellow vest” antigovern­ment demonstrat­ions and years of high alert following a string of terror attacks in France. Hundreds of police and headquarte­rs staff observed a minute of silence in the courtyard of the building Friday in memory of their fallen comrades.

“This tragedy is all the more awful as it took place inside the police headquarte­rs and it came from one of us,” Paris’s top policeman Didier Lallement said. The killings came a day after thousands of police officers marched in Paris for better working conditions, a rare protest against the backdrop of a spike in police suicides — 52 so far this year. The police have also been a recurring target of jihadist groups, such as Islamic State, behind a wave of attacks since 2015 — from large synchroniz­ed assaults to isolated knife and gun attacks. In June, a parliament­ary report on radicaliza­tion within the public services spoke of 30 suspected cases out of the 150,000 police officers and 130,000 gendarmes in France.

 ?? —AFP ?? PARIS: People leave Paris’ prefecture de police (police headquarte­rs) on October 3, 2019 after four officers were killed in a knife attack.
—AFP PARIS: People leave Paris’ prefecture de police (police headquarte­rs) on October 3, 2019 after four officers were killed in a knife attack.

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