The Citizen (KZN)

IS gunman shot dead

AS FRENCH POLICE SPOT HIM HE OPENS FIRE

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The gunman who killed three people at a Christmas market in Strasbourg was shot dead by French police on Thursday as the Islamic State (IS) jihadist group claimed him as one of its “soldiers”.

More than 700 French security forces had been hunting for 29-year-old Cherif Chekatt since the bloodshed on Tuesday night – the latest in a string of jihadist attacks to rock France.

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said three police tried to question Chekatt after spotting him on the street in the Neudorf area of the northeaste­rn French city where he grew up, but he opened fire. “They immediatel­y returned fire and neutralise­d the assailant,” Castaner said.

A source close to the investigat­ion said a woman spotted a man fitting Chekatt’s descriptio­n with a wounded arm on Thursday afternoon and alerted authoritie­s, who sealed off the area and used a helicopter with thermal cameras to hunt for the suspect.

People gathered at the police cordon where Chekatt was shot and applauded, some shouting “bravo!”, a source said.

“It’s really a huge relief,” said Alain Fontanel, a local official in the mayor’s office, describing the anxiety that locals had felt since Tuesday’s attack.

The propaganda wing of IS claimed responsibi­lity for Tuesday’s attack. The perpetrato­r of “the attack in the city of Strasbourg ... is one of the soldiers of the Islamic State and carried out the operation in response to calls to target nationals of the coalition” against IS, the Amaq agency said in a message posted on Twitter.

Chekatt, who lived in a rundown apartment block a short drive from the city centre, was flagged by French security forces in 2015, as a possible Islamic extremist.

France has been hit by a wave of attacks from people claiming allegiance to al-Qaeda or IS since 2015, which have claimed the lives of nearly 250 people.

It is also not the first time a Christmas market has been targeted in Europe. In 2016, a jihadist attacked a Christmas market in Berlin and went on the run through the Netherland­s and France before being shot and killed three days later in northern Italy.

Defiant local authoritie­s insisted the Strasbourg Christmas market would reopen as usual yesterday.

Chekatt was believed to have been wounded after exchanging fire with soldiers during the attack, but managed to escape and had not been seen since fleeing the scene on Tuesday.

Police in several other countries had joined the hunt for the criminal with at least 27 conviction­s in four European states.

Officers, who had already detained his parents and two brothers, took a fifth person into custody for questionin­g on Thursday. – AFP

 ?? Pictures: AFP ?? HUNTED DOWN. French police and forensic officers search for evidence at the site where Cherif Chekatt, inset, the gunman who has been on the run since allegedly killing three people at Strasbourg’s Christmas market, was shot dead by police yesterday in Neudorf in Strasbourg.
Pictures: AFP HUNTED DOWN. French police and forensic officers search for evidence at the site where Cherif Chekatt, inset, the gunman who has been on the run since allegedly killing three people at Strasbourg’s Christmas market, was shot dead by police yesterday in Neudorf in Strasbourg.

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