Bangkok Post

WORLD France pays tribute to attack victims

Heroic police officer among the mourned

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TREBES: Mourners in a rural French town rocked by a deadly Islamist attack were set to hold a mass yesterday to pay tribute to the victims, including a policeman hailed a hero for offering himself in place of a hostage.

Lieutenant-Colonel Arnaud Beltrame, 44, was shot and stabbed after taking the place of a woman whom Radouane Lakdim had been using as a human shield during his attack on Friday on a supermarke­t in the small town of Trebes.

A national tribute will be held at a later date for Beltrane, who President Emmanuel Macron said had “died a hero” and deserved “the respect and admiration of the whole nation”.

Following the worst jihadist attack of his presidency, Mr Macron has called a meeting later this week of the security services responsibl­e for monitoring individual­s suspected of radicalisa­tion.

Meanwhile, a mass was held at 10.30am local time yesterday in Trebes, where Mr Lakdim carried out his final attack on a supermarke­t.

The bishop of Carcassonn­e and Narbonne will celebrate mass in the Church of Saint-Etienne to honour the four killed and three wounded in the attacks claimed by the Islamic State group.

Mr Lakdim, 25, had been placed on a watchlist, but ultimately authoritie­s concluded the Moroccan-born French national did not pose a threat.

Investigat­ors found notes at Mr Lakdim’s home in the nearby town of Carcassonn­e which referred to IS, a legal source said, including a hand-written letter in which he claimed allegiance to the jihadist group.

His girlfriend and a 17-year-old friend were being held in custody as investigat­ors sought to understand events leading up to the attacks.

Mr Lakdim, who was armed with a gun, knife and homemade explosive devices according to a security source, was shot dead as police moved in to end the siege of the Super U supermarke­t where he had holed up after a shooting spree in nearby Carcassonn­e.

Earlier the gunman had hijacked a car in Carcassonn­e and shot the two people inside, killing the passenger and leaving the driver in a critical condition.

He also shot and wounded a police officer out jogging.

Mr Lakdim had already shot dead the supermarke­t’s butcher and a customer when Beltrame offered to take the place of a woman he had taken hostage.

Mr Lakdim, a petty criminal who was on a watchlist over fears he had been radicalise­d, shot and stabbed the policeman before he was himself killed by antiterror officers.

Beltrame died of his wounds early on Saturday, becoming the fourth victim in the shooting spree.

World leaders paid homage to the slain officer, with British Prime Minister Theresa May tweeting that his “sacrifice and courage will never be forgotten”.

US President Donald Trump denounced the “horrible attack” and Mr Macron thanked him and the American people for their “solidarity”.

“We honour the victims and the hero who gave his life to save others,” Mr Macron wrote on Twitter.

Beltrame’s brother Cedric said the policeman would have known all too well the risk he was taking.

“He certainly knew he didn’t stand a chance,” he said. “He gave his life for another.”

The attack has rocked Trebes, a sleepy town of 5,000 located on the picturesqu­e Canal du Midi.

Residents flocked on Saturday to lay flowers in front of the Super U, which remained closed, and to the police barracks in Carcassonn­e.

“We thought this only happened in big towns,” said a 52-year-old restaurant­owner who gave her name as Khadija.

The shootings come as France, part of the US-led coalition fighting IS, remains on high alert following a string of deadly attacks that have killed more than 240 people since 2015.

Mr Lakdim fit a familiar profile as a petty criminal who had turned to extremism.

A small-time drug-dealer, his rap sheet included conviction­s for carrying a banned weapon and for drug use. He spent a month in jail in 2016.

“He had been on a watchlist for his radicalisa­tion and links to the Salafist movement,” said top anti-terror prosecutor Francois Molins.

 ?? AFP ?? A person lays flowers next to gendarmes standing guard in front of the Gendarmeri­e Nationale in Carcassonn­e on Saturday.
AFP A person lays flowers next to gendarmes standing guard in front of the Gendarmeri­e Nationale in Carcassonn­e on Saturday.

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