Los Angeles Times

THREE FRENCH TROOPS SHOT IN ATTACK

Two of the soldiers die. It’s the second such assault by a man on a scooter this week in southwest France.

- Kim Willsher reporting from paris Willsher is a special correspond­ent.

Three members of a French parachute regiment were gunned down Thursday in a busy town center in southweste­rn France by an assassin on a scooter.

It was the second driveby shooting of French soldiers in less than a week, leading investigat­ors to fear military personnel were being targeted.

The three soldiers, all in uniforms, were standing by a bank ATM in the town of

‘Everyone thinks there’s a link between the two incidents, but we have to wait for the first results of the inquiry.’

— A police source,

speaking to French journalist­s

Montauban when the gunman opened fire shortly after 2 p.m. Two of the men, 24 and 26 years old, were killed instantly; the third, age 28, was in critical condition in a hospital Thursday night.

The soldiers were members of the 17th Engineer Airborne Regiment based at a barracks just yards from where they were shot. The unit has served in Afghanista­n, though it was not immediatel­y clear whether any of the victims had been deployed there.

Witnesses say the gunman, wearing a helmet with a visor covering most of his face, escaped on a scooter. Police immediatel­y sealed off the area, where investigat­ors found about 15 bullet casings.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the circumstan­ces of the killings remained “confused.”

“It was murder, that is for sure, but we cannot say for what reason,” the president, who is in the middle of a reelection campaign, said at a political meeting.

Thursday’s shootings came after a noncommiss­ioned officer of another parachute regiment was gunned down Sunday in similar circumstan­ces in Toulouse, 28 miles south of Montauban.

Imad Ibn Ziaten, 30, a staff sergeant in the 1st Airborne Transporta­tion Regiment, was shot in the head at close range outside a gymnasium by a gunman who sped off on a scooter.

According to investigat­ors, Ibn Ziaten, who was off duty and not in uniform at the time he was shot, had served with the French army in the African nations of Ivory Coast, Chad and Gabon.

Investigat­ors say they have not yet establishe­d a connection between the two shootings.

“Everyone thinks there’s a link between the two incidents, but we have to wait for the first results of the inquiry,” a police source told French journalist­s.

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