Los Angeles Times

2 killed in knife assault at train station in France

Man shouting “Allahu akbar!” goes after the two women before being fatally shot.

-

MARSEILLE, France — Armed with a knife, a man shouting “Allahu akbar!” killed two women at the main train station in the French city of Marseille on Sunday, and authoritie­s were working to determine whether the attacker had links to Islamic extremism.

Interior Minister Gerard Collomb, who went to Marseille to meet with local authoritie­s and troops on the scene, said local police have video that shows a man attacking a woman and running away, then returning and attacking a second woman.

The video shows the same man running toward soldiers who were rushing to Marseille’s St. Charles train station. The soldiers fatally shot him and the two women died of their injuries, Collomb said.

Some witnesses reported hearing the assailant shout “Allahu akbar!” — Arabic for “God is great,” Collomb said.

He said that the attack might have been of a terrorist nature but that authoritie­s could not be sure until the investigat­ion progressed.

The Paris prosecutor’s office, which oversees all terrorism cases in France, said it had opened a counter-terrorism investigat­ion of the Marseille attack. It did not provide further details, including a possible motive.

Police sources told the Associated Press that one of the victims was stabbed and one had her throat slit. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly about the investigat­ion.

Collomb declined to provide any details about the suspect or to identify the victims. He said the assailant’s “strange” behavior of attacking, running away and then returning to strike again was “a point of inquiry.”

Last month, four American college students were attacked with acid at the same train station. French authoritie­s said that the female assailant who doused four Boston College students was suffering from mental illness and that her actions were not investigat­ed as a terrorist attack.

President Emmanuel Macron said he was “deeply outraged” by Sunday’s “barbarous” knife attack. In a tweet, Macron paid tribute to the soldiers who responded “with [a] cool head and efficiency.”

The government has decided to maintain the socalled Operation Sentinel military force of 7,000 soldiers that was created to protect sensitive sites after the deadly extremist attacks of 2015.

St. Charles train station was evacuated and closed for several hours after the attack, and Marseille police warned people to avoid the area, tweeting that an operation was underway.

Soldiers and police took up positions outside the station.

The train station was partly reopened in the late afternoon, and authoritie­s allowed train traffic to and from Marseille to gradually resume.

 ?? Photograph­s by Claude Paris Associated Press ?? POLICE block access to St. Charles train station in Marseille, France, after a deadly knifing attack. The incident took place weeks after a woman doused four U.S. college students with acid at the same station.
Photograph­s by Claude Paris Associated Press POLICE block access to St. Charles train station in Marseille, France, after a deadly knifing attack. The incident took place weeks after a woman doused four U.S. college students with acid at the same station.
 ??  ?? FRENCH officials said that the knife attack might have been of a terrorist nature but that authoritie­s could not be sure until the investigat­ion progressed.
FRENCH officials said that the knife attack might have been of a terrorist nature but that authoritie­s could not be sure until the investigat­ion progressed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States