Nottingham Post

France on high alert after another attack

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FRENCH president Emmanuel Macron has announced that he will more than double the number of soldiers deployed to protect against terror attacks after three people were killed at a church in Nice.

Mr Macron’s decision to increase deployment­s from around 3,000 to 7,000 came hours after the stabbings at the Notre Dame basilica left three people dead.

The killings put France on its highest level of alert and comes at a time of extreme tension over the republicat­ion of caricature­s of the Prophet Mohammed by the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo.

A man armed with a knife attacked two women and a man at the church yesterday morning before he was shot by police.

As he lay wounded, Nice’s mayor said the attacker repeated “Allah Akbar!” over and over. French authoritie­s have opened a terrorism investigat­ion.

Prime Minister Jean Castex told French politician­s that the country would raise its alert level to “emergency” in response to the attack. Mr Macron later travelled to Nice to meet police officers in the city.

The suspect was believed to be acting alone and police are not searching for other attackers.

Images on French media showed the neighbourh­ood locked down and surrounded by police and emergency vehicles. The killings took place less than half a mile from the site in 2016 where another

attacker drive a truck into a Bastille Day crowd, killing dozens.

Shots punctuated the air and witnesses screamed as police stationed at the grandiose doors to the church appeared to fire at the attacker inside, according to videos obtained by The Associated Press.

Sounds of explosions could be heard as sappers exploded suspicious objects.

Later in the morning in the southern city of Avignon, an armed man was shot dead by police after he refused to drop his weapon and a Taser shot failed to stop him, a police official said.

And a Saudi state-run news agency said a man stabbed a guard at the French consulate in Jiddah, wounding the guard before he was arrested.

It was not immediatel­y clear if the incidents were linked to the attack in Nice.

There have been increased tensions in France over caricature­s of the Muslim Prophet Mohammed published by satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo, and after two other recent attacks in the country with links to the cartoons.

Less than two weeks ago, an attacker decapitate­d a French middle school teacher who showed caricature­s of the Prophet Mohammed for a class on free speech.

Those caricature­s were published by Charlie Hebdo and cited by the men who gunned down the newspaper’s editorial meeting in 2015.

 ??  ?? Emmanuel Macron meets police officers and rescue workers after the Nice attack
Emmanuel Macron meets police officers and rescue workers after the Nice attack
 ??  ?? A French police officer stands near Notre Dame church in Nice after the knife
A French police officer stands near Notre Dame church in Nice after the knife

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