The Daily Telegraph

Airlines are told to expect ‘French 9/11’ as Hollande warns of more Islamist violence

- By Henry Samuel and David Chazan in Paris

FRENCH security forces are bracing for major civil unrest and fear there could be an imminent September 11style attack, according to sources close to the country’s intelligen­ce services.

Airlines have also been warned of a possible attack on a plane with an antitank missile, a source said.

After Friday’s thwarted attempt to massacre passengers on an Amsterdam-Paris train and a series of terrorist attacks and attempted killings this year, President François Hollande warned the nation to prepare for more violence, which is considered inevitable as the Islamist threat grows. The army has made contingenc­y plans to win back control of neighbourh­oods where residents become hostile to security forces and where guns are easily obtainable, according to the source.

“There are a lot of alienated fourthgene­ration immigrant kids in the suburbs and the prospect of radicalisa­tion is increasing­ly likely,” the source said. “The idea that attacks like the one on the train are carried out by individual­s on their own is not credible. We’re dealing with highly-organised networks of militant Islamists embarked on a campaign of violence and determined to intensify it.”

Kalashniko­v automatic rifles – used by the train gunman and Islamist terrorists who killed 17 people in Paris in January – and anti-tank missiles are now obtainable in France. There are fears that Islamist groups are procuring heavy weapons from Libya.

Agents of the DGSI, France’s equivalent of MI5, said they had been “lucky” to have avoided far worse incidents since the Paris Islamist attacks in January that killed 17, Le Canard Enchaîné reported.

An agent told the newspaper there were fears of “an upcoming 11 September à la française where [intelligen­ce] services are mere spectators”.

European transport ministers are to discuss more “systematic and coordinate­d” security checks in a meeting in Paris on Saturday, said Bernard Cazeneuve, the French interior minister.

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