The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Abbey re-opens after visitor threatens security services

France: Famous abbey sealed off as house-to-house inquiries carried out

-

French authoritie­s have reopened Mont-Saint-Michel abbey to visitors after an earlier evacuation on the famed English Channel site after a visitor apparently threatened to attack security services.

The evacuation of one of France’s most-visited tourist sites came after a string of sporadic attacks around France in recent years targeting police, some of them fatal.

The site reopened yesterday afternoon and a trickle of tourists started returning to the Mont across a promontory that connects it to the mainland.

Several hours of searching failed to turn up the suspect, and police expanded their search to neighbouri­ng towns, according to the national gendarme service.

Details of Sunday’s threat were unclear, but the gendarme service said authoritie­s ordered the evacuation as a precaution.

During the police operation, at least three police helicopter­s circling over the peninsula, notably famous for being isolated by high tides.

The hilltop abbey, whose origins date to the 10th century, and surroundin­g sites attract more than two million visitors every year.

Police officers patrolled the steep cobbleston­e paths leading up to the abbey, packed with restaurant­s

“Searches to verify if individual still on Mont-St-Michel”

and souvenir shops and normally packed with tourists and pilgrims 365 days a year. Thousands of people were affected by the evacuation, but the mood was calm.

Some tourists were taken out of their hotels, while others were blocked upon arrival.

“We wanted to go to Mass at the abbey. But now we can’t,” said Clotilde, a 23-year-old from Paris who arrived Sunday morning.

Some angry South Korean tourists shouted at an organiser trying to explain the situation.

Their group of 32 was turned back to Paris after being blocked from reaching Mont-Saint-Michel.

Tour guide Andrew Rui remained calm, noting the evacuation was prompted by security concerns.

“We cannot control the situation so we accept this phenomenon,” he said.

The regional prosecutor’s office opened an investigat­ion into the threat, amid contradict­ory informatio­n about what happened.

An official with the national gendarme service said the man made the threat Sunday on one of the shuttles serving the site.

The head of the regional administra­tion, Jean-Marc Sabathe, told broadcaste­r Francetvin­fo that the man made the threat when he was trying to stage a street performanc­e and got in an argument with a worker.

He said the man was caught on video surveillan­ce cameras.

“I am ordering house-byhouse searches to verify if the individual is still on Mont-Saint-Michel.

“It’s possible that the individual left the Mont with the flux of tourists,” Mr Sabathe said.

Monks and nuns were told to stay inside the abbey during the evacuation, according to the gendarme service, and the Mont’s few other residents were told to stay in their homes. cafe

 ??  ?? ON GUARD: Armed police attend the scene of an evacuation at Mont Saint-Michel, on France’s northern coast, amid fears of a threat to security services
ON GUARD: Armed police attend the scene of an evacuation at Mont Saint-Michel, on France’s northern coast, amid fears of a threat to security services

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom