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CRIME

Three French police officers killed after call-out to domestic disturbance

Three police officers were shot dead in Puy-de-Dôme in central France on Wednesday after being called out to a domestic disturbance, sources in the public prosecutor's office told AFP.

Three French police officers killed after call-out to domestic disturbance
Illustration photo: AFP

The police officers, including a fourth who was wounded in the incident, were shot by a 48-year-old man as they attempted to rescue a woman.

Police approached the house shortly after midnight and were targeted by gunfire.

The gunman initially shot and killed one officer and wounded another, before setting fire to the house.

Two further officers, responding to the scene, were then fired on and killed, according to the Clermont-Ferrand prosecutor's office.

Officials said the woman had been safely rescued, and that at least seven elite tactical police officers remained on site.

“The greatest precautions are being taken with regard to the dangerousness of the individual,” a source close to the investigation told AFP.

The gunman was later found dead, said Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin. He is said to be known to authorities for charges relating to child custody issues.

Firefighters are also on site attempting to control the blaze.

The prefecture of Puy-de-Dome told AFP that the situation was still developing.

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POLICE

French police detain man after alert from Iran consulate in Paris

French authorities on Friday detained a man after receiving an alert from the Iranian consulate in Paris that someone had entered carrying an explosive, the capital's police authority said.

French police detain man after alert from Iran consulate in Paris

“The man has exited the consulate and is being interrogated by police,” the préfecture said.

A security source earlier told AFP that the mission called in law enforcement after a witness saw “a man enter carrying a grenade or an explosive belt”.

Ultimately French police found no explosives at the Iranian consulate in Paris or on a suspect detained there, prosecutors said.

Police arrested the man, born in Iran in 1963, when he exited after appearing to have “threatened violent action” inside, it said.

An AFP journalist said the whole neighbourhood around the consulate in the capital’s 16th district had been closed off and a heavy police presence was in place.

Paris transport company RATP on X, formerly Twitter, said traffic had been suspended on two metro lines that transit through stops close to the building.

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