Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Knife-wielding man kills two

Five others wounded as residents venture out to buy supplies

- By Thomas Adamson

PARIS — A man wielding a knife attacked residents of a French town while they ventured out to shop amid a nationwide coronaviru­s lockdown Saturday, killing two people and wounding five others in an act that led authoritie­s to open a terrorism inquiry.

France’s counter-terrorism prosecutor’s office said the assailant was arrested near the scene of the attack in the town of Romans-sur-Isere, south of Lyon, as he was kneeling on the sidewalk praying in Arabic. It said one of his acquaintan­ces also was detained.

Prosecutor­s did not identify the suspect. They said he had no identifyin­g documents but claimed to be Sudanese and to have been born in 1987.

During a subsequent search of his home, authoritie­s found handwritte­n documents that included arguments about religion and a complaint about living in a “country of unbeliever­s,” officials said.

Like the rest of France, Romans-sur-Isere’s residents have been ordered to stay home except for a few exceptions.

The victims were doing their food shopping, one of the permitted outside activities, on the street that has bakeries and grocery stores, according to the prosecutor’s office.

French media reported that the assailant first attacked a man who had just left home for a daily walk — slitting his throat in front of the victim’s girlfriend and son.

Next, the assailant went into a tobacco shop, stabbed the tobacconis­t and two customers, and then went into the local butcher’s shop, according to French news reports.. He grabbed another knife and attacked a customer with the blunt end before entering a supermarke­t, the media said.

French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner arrived at the scene within hours and thanked shopkeeper­s for their help.

Some 100 police officers and 45 firefighte­rs were involved in the operation and securing the area, authoritie­s said.

There have been a number of knife attacks in France in recent months. In January, French police shot and injured a man in Metz who was waving a knife and shouting “Allahu akbar” (God is great).

Two days earlier, another man was shot dead by police after he stabbed one person fatally and wounded two others in a Paris suburb.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States