The Borneo Post

Police widen probe into Paris knife attacker

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PARIS: French investigat­ors will widen their probe to include possible help provided to the Chechen- born 20-year- old whose stabbing spree in central Paris, claimed by the Islamic State group, left one person dead and four seriously wounded.

The man, identified as naturalise­d Frenchman Khamzat Azimov, carried out the attack Saturday night in a lively area of theatres and restaurant­s near the city’s historic opera house.

The knifeman, whose rampage followed a series of jihadist assaults in France that have killed 246 people since 2015, was shot dead by police after an officer failed to subdue him with a Taser.

A source close to the inquiry said Azimov grew up with his family in Strasbourg, eastern France, which has a large community of Chechen refugees.

His parents, now living in Paris, have been taken into custody as well as a friend in Strasbourg described as the ‘individual closest’ to Azimov, according to a source close to the investigat­ion.

Amaq, the IS propaganda agency, released a video in which it claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, with footage which it claims shows Azimov pledging allegiance to the jihadist group.

IS has long urged followers to seek ‘martyrdom’ by targeting American or European ‘infidels’ by any available means, and allegiance videos help the group bolster its claims of responsibi­lity.

Although Azimov had no criminal record, he had been on both of France’s main watchlists for suspected radicals – the so- called ‘S file’ and a more targeted File for the Prevention of Terrorist Radicalisa­tion (FSPRT), which focuses on people judged to be terror threats – since 2016.

One source said he had been questioned last year “because he knew a man who was in contact with a person who had gone to Syria”.

Hundreds of fighters from Chechnya have joined Islamic militant groups in recent years, following two bloody separatist wars against Russianbac­ked authoritie­s in the 1990s and 2000s. Azimov became a French citizen in 2010 after his mother was naturalise­d, government spokesman Benjamin Griveaux told French television.

Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov said on the Telegram messenging app that Azimov had obtained a Russian passport when he was 14, before obtaining French nationalit­y.

Kadyrov said France bears ‘ full responsibi­lity’ for the attack, because although Azimov was born in Chechnya “he grew up and formed his personalit­y, his opinions and conviction­s within French society”.

A 29-year- old man was killed in the attack, while a Chinese man aged 34 who lives in Luxembourg and a woman of 54 were seriously wounded and rushed to hospital.

A 26-year-old woman and a man of 31 were slightly wounded. Officials said all the wounded were out of danger. Witnesses described dramatic scenes as the knifeman struck, walking along stabbing people and yelling ‘Allahu akbar’ (God is greatest).

“I was taking orders and I saw a young woman panicking and trying to get into the restaurant,” Jonathan, a waiter at a Korean restaurant, told AFP.

“The attacker entered a shopping street, I saw him with a knife in his hand,” he said. “He looked crazy.”

French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted: “France has once again paid the price in blood but will not give an inch to the enemies of freedom.”

The attack again underscore­d the difficulty in tracking suspected extremists by police facing thousands of potential risks, either from homegrown radicals or recent arrivals.

About half of the nearly 20,000 people on the FSPRT watchlist are under active surveillan­ce.

“What good does this S file do if we don’t use it to get these ticking time bombs off French soil,” farright leader Marine Le Pen posted on Twitter. But spokesman Griveaux defended the government, saying it had foiled 22 terror attacks over the past 15 months. “Unfortunat­ely, there’s no such thing as zero risk,” he said.

 ??  ?? A bullet hole is seen on the window of a cafe a day after the stabbing incident. (Right) Khamzat Azimov— AFP photos
A bullet hole is seen on the window of a cafe a day after the stabbing incident. (Right) Khamzat Azimov— AFP photos
 ??  ?? French policemen arrest a man in Strasbourg, suspected to be related to Azimov. — AFP photo
French policemen arrest a man in Strasbourg, suspected to be related to Azimov. — AFP photo

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