Orlando Sentinel

Two ISIS-aligned terrorists

Commandos fatally shoot pair at church

- By James McAuley and Brian Murphy The Washington Post

storm a village church in France, taking hostages and slitting the throat of an 85-year-old priest. Both are shot and killed by police commandos.

SAINT-ETIENNE-DU-ROUVRAY, France — Two attackers backing the Islamic State stormed a village church during Mass in northern France on Tuesday, taking hostages and slitting the throat of an 85-year-old priest before police commandos shot and killed the assailants, authoritie­s said.

The Islamic State’s Amaq news agency described the attackers as “soldiers” of the militant group, according to the SITE Intelligen­ce Group, which monitors terrorist activity. But it was not clear whether the assailants had direct contact with the Islamic State, also known as ISIS.

At least one of the attackers — Adel Kermiche, 19 — appeared to be on a watch list, which required him to wear an electronic tag to allow security officials to track his movements, said a police official cited by the Associated Press. The AP said the official spoke on the condition of anonymity to disclose informatio­n about the case.

A French news channel, BFM-TV, carried a similar report, adding that the attacker tried to reach Syria, but was turned back at the Turkish border and was then jailed by French authoritie­s. He was released in March, the report said.

French President Francois Hollande — who traveled to the church near the city of Rouen in the Normandy region — said the attackers had pledged allegiance to ISIS.

The assault also will likely put further pressure on European security officials less than two weeks after 84 people were killed in a terrorist attack, apparently inspired by the Islamic State, in Nice, France.

In addition, the Islamic State claimed a connection with two attackers in Germany who wounded 20 people this month. Two other attacks in Germany

that killed 10 people in the past week had no evident connection with the group.

Authoritie­s in Europe had previously concentrat­ed on suspected militants who returned from Islamic State-held territory in Syria or Iraq. But many recent attacks appear to have been carried out by individual­s radicalize­d by Islamic State propaganda and who pledged loyalty on their own.

In Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray, about 35 miles southeast of the port of Le Havre, French soldiers patrolled the narrow streets

and mourners gathered in the main square. Police cordoned off the area around the church, whose main entrance is an arched wooden door under a stone tower capped by a peaked roof.

Another person held by the hostage-takers at the church suffered life-threatenin­g injuries, said Interior Ministry spokesman PierreHenr­y Brandet.

Alexandre Joly, 44, described the slain priest — identified as the Rev. Jacques Hamel — as “like an attentive grandfathe­r” in the village, on the banks of the Seine as it begins to

snake toward the English Channel.

“He loved marrying young people,” Joly said. “He saw a purpose in it, and he had so much wisdom to impart.”

The area also reflected the multicultu­ral side of France. A mosque in a nearby town was built for Muslims in the region, including families that moved from North Africa decades ago.

Fatima, 58, an Algerianbo­rn woman who said she lived in the village for 40 years, joined the crowds in the main square to pay homage “for the memory of the priest.”

“We are with him,” said Fatima, who only gave her first name. “All Muslims are with him.”

France remains under an extended state of emergency after a truck rampage through Bastille Day crowds in the Riviera city of Nice on July 14, killing 84 people and injuring more than 300.

Hollande said the country needed to use “all means” against ISIS, but gave no details on possible new crackdowns or expansion of French support to the U.S.-led coalition conducting airstrikes against the militants’ stronghold­s in Iraq and Syria.

A Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, denounced the “barbarous killing” of the French priest.

Lombardi said Pope Francis was shaken by “the pain and horror of this absurd violence” and “condemned, in the most radical way, any form of hate.”

The Islamic State has carried out systematic persecutio­n and abuses against religious minorities in Syria and Iraq, including Yazidi villages and Christian communitie­s that date back to the early centuries of the faiths. In some areas, groups of Yazidi women have been forced into slavery by the militants.

 ?? FRANCOIS MORI/AP ?? French officers search Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray village after a fatal church raid Tuesday.
FRANCOIS MORI/AP French officers search Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray village after a fatal church raid Tuesday.

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