The Herald

Fifty victims fight for life:

Dozen children among 84 killed in truck attack as Britons also injured

- MICHAEL SETTLE UK POLITICAL EDITOR

THE human toll of the massacre in Nice looks set to rise today with 84 people confirmed dead, including a dozen children, with at least 50 more victims struggling “between life and death”.

In all, 202 people, including a “small number of Britons”, sustained injuries when the lone killer used a 19-tonne lorry to mow down revellers celebratin­g France’s national Bastille Day along the resort’s picturesqu­e Promenade des Anglais.

“Bodies were falling like skittles,” said one witness.

Another said: “It was like hallucinat­ing. The lorry zigzagged; you had no idea where it was going. My wife, a metre away, was dead. It ripped through everything; poles, trees. Some people were hanging on the door and tried to stop it.”

Among those injured are 52 people said to be in a critical condition with 25 of them fighting for their lives in intensive care.

The carnage lasted for more than a mile as the killer – named as local delivery man and petty criminal Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel – deliberate­ly targeted people on the seafront, swerving from side to side and said to have been travelling at up to 40mph.

As some ran for cover, others threw themselves into the sea to avoid death and injury. Parents flung their children over fences in a desperate bid to protect them.

When the lorry eventually stopped in a pedestrian­ised area, Bouhlel was reported to have pulled a gun and was shot dead by police. Guns and grenades were later found inside the vehicle.

French president Francois Hollande, who said the “monstrosit­y” of using a lorry to kill people on the French Riviera bore all the hallmarks of Islamist extremism, declared: “France is in tears; it is hurting. But it is strong and she will be strong, always stronger than the fanatics, who wish to hurt us.”

Sylvie Bermann, the French ambassador to the UK, described the massacre in Nice as an attack on the founding principles of the republic: liberty; equality and fraternity.

The president announced a three-month extension to the state of emergency, He said the country’s borders were being strengthen­ed and that 10,000 additional troops were being made available for mobilisati­on. He also vowed France would show “real force and military action in Syria and Iraq”.

Three days of national mourning have been declared following the atrocity, which comes after co-ordinated terror attacks in November in Paris when 130 people were murdered and in January 2015 in the so-called Charlie Hebdo tragedy, which claimed 17 lives.

France, which just days ago had expressed relief the European football championsh­ips it had hosted had ended without serious incident, is today asking itself why it is being targeted and how its people can be protected. Mr Hollande was reported to have been booed as his convoy of vehicles travelled to southern France.

Last night, a vigil for the dead and injured took place at Nice cathedral.

This morning, the French authoritie­s are trying to piece together the circumstan­ces behind yet another terror attack.

Bouhlel, a 31-year-old father-of-three, estranged from his wife, was described as being of French-Tunisian origin. He was not known to the security services but was known to the police.

The killer was reported as having conviction­s for theft, domestic violence, and possessing a weapon. He was under judicial supervisio­n and had recently lost his delivery job after falling asleep at the wheel and crashing into several cars.

According to local reports, he was not said to be religious and did not attend a mosque. Neighbours described him as withdrawn and quiet. A cousin of his estranged wife told the Daily Mail Bouhlel drank alcohol and took drugs. “He beat his wife. He was a nasty piece of work,” he said.

Police officers and forensic teams searched the killer’s flat in Nice as well as his former marital home.

He was reported to have hired the lorry on Monday, taking the

‘‘ The lorry zigzagged. My wife, a metre away, was dead. People were hanging on the door and tried to stop it

biggest in the fleet; a 19-tonne vehicle, normally used for removals.

Meanwhile, Theresa May, on her first official visit as Prime Minister to Scotland, condemned the “horrifying” terror attack and made clear Britain stood “shoulder to shoulder” with France and its people. She stressed how the UK had to redouble its efforts to defeat the “brutal” terrorist murderers.

Earlier, a meeting of Whitehall’s emergency Cobra committee was held with police forces in Scotland, England and Wales told to review security measures at all major public events in the coming days.

Deputy assistant commission­er Neil Basu, of the National Police Chiefs’ Council, said: “UK policing continues to operate at a heightened state against the backdrop of a severe threat level; that level has been in place since 2014.

“Our policing tactics and security measures are constantly reviewed and we, along with our partners, are working around the clock to keep our cities as safe as can be.”

The Queen sent a message of condolence to Mr Hollande saying: “I was deeply shocked and saddened to hear of the terrible loss of life in Nice.”

The Muslim Associatio­n of Britain expressed its condolence­s to the bereaved and added: “We stand together with the people of France during these difficult times.”

 ??  ?? RIDDLED WITH BULLET HOLES: Investigat­ors check the truck that slammed into revellers before armed police fired at the driver in an attempt to halt his murderous drive.
RIDDLED WITH BULLET HOLES: Investigat­ors check the truck that slammed into revellers before armed police fired at the driver in an attempt to halt his murderous drive.
 ??  ?? AFTERMATH: Bodies were left in the street, given dignity only by a covered sheet. Picture: Eric Gaillard /Reuters
AFTERMATH: Bodies were left in the street, given dignity only by a covered sheet. Picture: Eric Gaillard /Reuters
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? VICTIMS: Baseball fans Sean Copeland and son Brodie, from Austin, Texas, were on holiday.
VICTIMS: Baseball fans Sean Copeland and son Brodie, from Austin, Texas, were on holiday.
 ??  ?? VICTIM: Victoria Savchenko, 21, was a student at the Russian government’s elite Financial University in Moscow.
VICTIM: Victoria Savchenko, 21, was a student at the Russian government’s elite Financial University in Moscow.
 ??  ?? ATTACKER: Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel, a 31-year-old French-Tunisian, has been named as the driver of the truck. HAT MESSAGE: French golfer Clement Sordet, playing at the Open at Royal troon, has a handwritte­n tribute to the victims on his cap. Picture:...
ATTACKER: Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel, a 31-year-old French-Tunisian, has been named as the driver of the truck. HAT MESSAGE: French golfer Clement Sordet, playing at the Open at Royal troon, has a handwritte­n tribute to the victims on his cap. Picture:...
 ??  ?? GRIEVING: Two women can’t hold back the tears at the scene yesterday.
GRIEVING: Two women can’t hold back the tears at the scene yesterday.
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