New York Daily News

A BLOODY PLACE

2 stabbed near Paris office where 12 slain in ’15

- BY ELAINE GANLEY, ANGELA CHARLTON AND OLEG CETINIC

The main suspect in the double stabbing Friday outside the former Paris offices of a satirical newspaper where a dozen people were killed in 2015 was arrested a month ago for carrying a screwdrive­r but not on police radar for Islamic radicaliza­tion, France’s interior minister said.

Two suspects were arrested separately shortly after the stabbing in which two people were wounded, although the links between the two suspects weren’t immediatel­y clear. The main suspect, the young man wearing orange gym shoes, with a few speckles of blood on his forehead, was arrested on the steps of the Bastille Opera not far from the attack site, near the building where the weekly Charlie Hebdo was located before the 2015 attack.

The interior minister said the young man arrived in France three years ago as an unaccompan­ied minor, apparently from Pakistan, but his identity was still being verified.

“But manifestly it’s an act of Islamist terrorism,” Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said in an interview with the France 2 television station. “Obviously, there is little doubt. It’s a new bloody attack against our country, against journalist­s, against this society.”

France’s counterter­rorism prosecutor said earlier that authoritie­s suspect a terrorist motive because of the place and timing of the stabbings: in front of the building where Charlie Hebdo was based until the Islamic extremist attack on its cartoonist­s and at a time when suspects in the 2015 attack are on trial across town.

Prosecutor Jean-Francois Ricard said that the chief suspect in Friday’s stabbings was arrested, along with another person. Ricard said the assailant did not know the people stabbed, a woman and a man working at a documentar­y production company who had stepped outside for a smoke break.

An investigat­ion was opened into “attempted murder in relation with a terrorist enterprise,” according to an official at the terrorism prosecutor’s office.

French Prime Minister Jean Castex said the lives of the two wounded workers lives were not in danger. He offered the government’s solidarity with their families and colleagues.

He noted the “symbolic site” of the attack, “at the very moment where the trial into the atrocious acts against Charlie Hebdo is under way.” He promised the government’s “unfailing attachment to freedom of the press, and its determinat­ion to fight terrorism.”

People in the neighborho­od were stunned, saying on French TV that they were reliving the nightmare of the newsroom massacre. No one gave their identities.

In a tweet, Charlie Hebdo strongly condemned the stabbings.

“This tragic episode shows us once again that fanaticism, intoleranc­e, the origins of which will be revealed by the investigat­ion, are still present in French society….There is no question of ceding anything,” the newspaper said.

The two people confirmed injured worked for documentar­y film company Premieres Lignes, according to founder Paul Moreira. He told France’s BFM television that the attacker fled into the subway, and the company’s staff members were evacuated.

Moreira said a man in the street “attacked two people who were in front of the building, didn’t enter the building, and who attacked them with an axe and who left.” He said the company had not received any threats.

His colleague, Luc Hermann, describing witnesses’ version of the attack, said the assailant first struck the woman in her face, then the man, before returning to attack the woman again.

A wrenching, two-month trial in the Charlie Hebdo attacks is currently unfolding at the main Paris courthouse. Murmurs broke at the terrorism trial of 14 people, including 3 fugitives, accused of helping the attackers in the January 2015 killings, as the news filtered through.

 ??  ?? French police detain an alleged suspect after several people were injured in a knife attack Friday near the former Paris offices of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, the scene of a 2015 massacre in which 12 people were killed.
French police detain an alleged suspect after several people were injured in a knife attack Friday near the former Paris offices of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, the scene of a 2015 massacre in which 12 people were killed.
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