The Borneo Post

Five charged over Nice truck attack

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PARIS: Five suspects have been formally charged over the truck attack in the French Riveria city of Nice that killed 84 people, the Paris prosecutor said Thursday,

Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel, who mowed down crowds of people enjoying a Bastille Day fireworks display, had long plotted the carnage, prosecutor Francois Molins said.

The revelation­s come as the French government continues to be plagued by questions over possible security failings, prompting authoritie­s to launch an investigat­ion into potential oversights.

Molins said photos on Bouhlel’s phone showed he had likely already staked out the same July 14 event in 2015.

It also emerged that one of the five suspects in custody, a Tunisian named Mohamed Oualid G., had filmed the scene the day after the carnage, as it crawled with paramedics and journalist­s.

The five were brought before antiterror­ism judges late Thursday and charged.

They are 22-year- old FrancoTuni­sian Ramzi A, 37-year- old Tunisian Chokri C, 40-year- old Tunisian Mohamed Oualid G, 38-year- old Albanian Artan H, and his wife Enkeledja Z who holds both French and Albanian nationalit­y.

None were known to intelligen­ce services, and only Ramzi A., who was born in Nice, had a criminal record, for robbery and drug offences.

He led police to discover a Kalashniko­v and a bag of ammunition on Thursday, however the purpose of the weapons was unclear.

Ramzi, Chokri and Oualid were charged with being accomplice­s to murder by a terror group.

Ramzi and the Albanian couple faced a second charge, of breaking the law on firearms in relation to a terrorist crime. They are accused of providing Bouhlel with the gun he fired at police officers before he was shot dead.

More than 400 investigat­ors have been poring over evidence since the grisly attack last Thursday, the third in France in 18 months, and it was analyses of Bouhlel’s telephone records that led them to the five suspects.

While the Islamic State group claimed the attack, describing Bouhlel as a “soldier”, investigat­ors have not found direct proof of his allegiance to the jihadists.

Many people interviewe­d by investigat­ors described the Tunisian father of three as “someone who did not practise the Muslim religion, ate pork, drank alcohol, took drugs and had an unbridled sexual activity”, Molins said earlier this week.

However initial details of the investigat­ion revealed Bouhlel had been fascinated with jihad for a while.

In May last year, he took a photo of an article about the drug Captagon, an amphetamin­e used by jihadists in Syria.

In July 2015 he took photos of the crowd at the Bastille Day fireworks display, as well as another crowd watching a concert on Nice’s Promenade Des Anglais three days later.

In April this year, Chokri C. sent Bouhlel a Facebook message reading: “Load the truck with 2,000 tonnes of iron... release the brakes my friend and I will watch.”

Investigat­ors also found a text message in Bouhlel’s phone from Mohamed Oualid in January 2015 – roughly a year after attacks on the Charlie Hebdo satirical weekly which spawned the hashtag “I am Charlie” in support of those killed.

The message read: “I am not Charlie... I am happy they have brought soldiers of Allah to finish the job.” — AFP

 ??  ?? People stand by the new makeshift memorial in tribute to the victims of the deadly Bastille Day attack at the Promenade des Anglais, in Nice, after it was moved from the pavement of the road to the seafront so that the street can be re-opened. — AFP...
People stand by the new makeshift memorial in tribute to the victims of the deadly Bastille Day attack at the Promenade des Anglais, in Nice, after it was moved from the pavement of the road to the seafront so that the street can be re-opened. — AFP...

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