Scottish Daily Mail

MANHUNT IN A FOREST CAVERN

88,000 troops and police scour woods for Paris killers

- By David Williams and Emine Sinmaz in Abbaye de Longpont

THE huge manhunt f or the fugitive Al Qaeda killers was focused on a vast cave in a forest in northern France last night as questions mounted about why the gunmen were free to carry out their terrifying attack.

Some 88,000 police and soldiers are involved amid fears that brothers Cherif and Said Kouachi are on a ‘martyrdom mission’ and will die fighting rather than be captured.

Police warned the killers may strike again as Prime Minister Manuel Valls admitted the men were on the radar of the intelligen­ce services and ‘were likely’ to have been under surveillan­ce before the atrocity.

As darkness fell last night, heavily armed police and Special Forces were scouring the woodland 50 miles northeast of Paris. Specialist officers were searching the huge cave hundreds of feet deep for any sign of the gunmen.

The pair left behind their personal identity cards in the Citroen they initially used for the Charlie Hebdo attack – a move which appeared deliberate, intelligen­ce specialist­s said. Police now fear they could take hostages or are planning a final ‘spectacula­r’ before capture.

The brothers abandoned their car near the village of Abbaye de Longpont shortly after robbing a petrol station yesterday.

Anti-terror officers found a jihadi flag and a Molotov cocktail in the Renault Clio the gunmen hijacked to escape the French capital – and two men fitting their descriptio­ns were seen running into the Foret de Retz, which covers an area larger than Paris. A petrol station attendant in Villers-Cotterets told police he had seen Kalashniko­vs and rocket launchers in the vehicle which had sped away after the men had stolen food and water.

There are fewer than 300 residents in Longpont and armed officers were carrying out house-to-house searches as helicopter­s with thermal imagery equipment capable of identifyin­g human bodies among the trees were called in. Two houses were surrounded and stormed by units of 20 officers wearing balaclavas and black combat gear.

Several rural roads had also been sealed off and checkpoint­s mounted by armed police who evacuated diners from restaurant­s and called in armoured vehicles to provide them with ‘cover’ against men who have already proved to be trained marks- men. Benoit Verdun, the manager of the Abbaye hotel in Longpont, said: ‘The forest around here is enormous, so if the brothers have gone in there it will be quite a hunt.’

A cave complex several hundred feet deep was also being searched. Fleury resident Veronique La Mer, who lives within 50 yards of the cave, said: ‘We are afraid. I didn’t sleep at all last night. I have two children in the house. The police told us to stay inside in our houses. We have seen police swarming the villages all day and helicopter­s over our heads.

‘These woods are huge. You could easily hide out here for weeks and there are lots of caves. The atmosphere in town is very strange. At 6pm the streets were deserted. Everyone was afraid to be outside.’

Beatrice Le Frans, another resi- dent, said balaclava-clad men carrying machine guns thumped on her door demanding to be let in.

‘I thought they were the terrorists,’ she said. ‘They were trying to break down my door. But then they said they were the police. They said to be careful and stay inside. Luckily I have three grown-up sons here, otherwise I would be very scared.’

Mr Valls said France was facing a

terrorist threat ‘without precedent’, adding: ‘Because they were known, they had been followed.’

When and why that surveillan­ce was dropped were two of the many questions being asked yesterday as details emerged of how the brothers had been arrested in 2005 as suspected members of a group sending fighters to Iraq.

In 2008, Cherif Kouachi was sentenced to three years in jail for his associatio­n with an undergroun­d organisati­on. While in jail, he came under the influence of the one-time British- based terrorist Djemal Beghal, who was sentenced to ten years in prison by the French courts for terrorist offenders.

Known to be ‘hardline’ Al Qaeda – he had visited Osama Bin Laden’s headquarte­rs i n Afghanista­n – Beghal continued to meet Cherif after they were released from jail.

But despite the security services knowing the men were radicalise­d and suspected of having been trained in military tactics in east Yemen by Al Qaeda, they were not under surveillan­ce on Wednesday.

Last night there had already been several revenge attacks, with shots fired at a Muslim prayer room in the southern town of Port-la-Nouvelle. A Muslim family was shot at in their car in Caromb, in southern Vaucluse, while ‘Death to Arabs’ was daubed on a mosque in Poitiers, central France.

 ??  ?? Target: Riot officers swooping on a school in the hunt for the terror suspects
Target: Riot officers swooping on a school in the hunt for the terror suspects
 ??  ?? Manhunt: Police officers near the town of Villers-Cotterets yesterday
Manhunt: Police officers near the town of Villers-Cotterets yesterday
 ??  ?? Protection: Policeman with rifle
Protection: Policeman with rifle
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Armed presence: Riot police hunting for the Al Qaeda killers patrol the streets of Abbaye de Longpont, a village of 00 people north of Paris, yesterday
Armed presence: Riot police hunting for the Al Qaeda killers patrol the streets of Abbaye de Longpont, a village of 00 people north of Paris, yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom