The Columbus Dispatch

Police question parents, friend of Paris attacker

- By Elaine Ganley

PARIS — Investigat­ors are following the trail of a 20-year-old Frenchman born in Chechnya who rampaged through a festive Paris neighborho­od on Saturday night slashing passers-by with a knife.

The man identified as Khamzat Azimov killed a 29-year-old man and wounded four other people, one from Luxembourg, in a festive area near Paris’ old opera house. Police shot him to death as he charged them, witnesses said. Less than 24 hours later, investigat­ors were questionin­g three people — his parents and a friend.

The Islamic State group quickly claimed responsibi­lity for the attack via its Aamaq news agency, saying Azimov was their “soldier” acting in response to the group’s calls for supporters to target members of the U.S.-led anti-IS military coalition, a stock response. France’s military has been active in the coalition since 2014.

On Sunday, Aamaq released a video said to show the attacker calling on Muslims in Europe to “take action in the land of A bullet hole remains in a window of a cafe near where a man attacked five people with a knife, killing one, before he was shot dead by police officers in central Paris on Saturday. disbelieve­rs” if they can’t travel to the crumbling caliphate in Iraq and Syria, which has been pounded by coalition forces. The man said French citizens should pressure their government “if you want it (attacks) to end.”

SITE Intelligen­ce Group, which monitors jihadi propaganda, obtained the video, which could not be

independen­tly authentica­ted. The young man’s face is covered, except for his eyes, with a black bandanna and the hood of his coat. The video was made outside amid trees and falling rain. French authoritie­s had no comment.

Police detained Azimov’s parents in the northern 18th district of Paris and held a friend from Strasbourg in

that city on the border with Germany in eastern France, French officials said. The friend was detained Sunday afternoon.

A security official said investigat­ors searched the Paris residence of the parents. The official wasn’t authorized to speak about the investigat­ion and insisted on not being quoted by name.

The suspect was on a police watch list for radicalism, a judicial official not authorized to speak publicly about the case told The Associated Press. But he had a clean criminal record and did not know his victims, Interior Ministry spokesman Frederic de Lanouvelle said.

The assailant was born in November 1997 in the largely Muslim Russian republic of Chechnya, where extremism has long simmered. Chechens have been among the foreign fighters in Syria and Iraq, some joining the Islamic State cause early in the fighting.

Chechnya’s president weighed in after the rampage, perhaps striking a nerve by insisting Sunday that France bears responsibi­lity for the knifings. He said Azimov held a Russian passport only until he was 14 years old.

“I consider it necessary to state that all responsibi­lity for the fact that Khamzat Azimov went on the road of crime lies completely with the authoritie­s of France,” Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov said. “He was only born in Chechnya, and his growing up, the formation of his personalit­y, his views and persuasion­s occurred in French society.”

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