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CRIME

Four men sentenced over French far-right terror plot

A Paris court Friday sentenced to prison four men from a French neo-Nazi group who discussed attacks on mosques and Jewish targets in an online chat group.

Four men sentenced over French far-right terror plot
The International League against Racism and Antisemitism (Licra) was discussed by the four men as a target. Photo: Geoffroy VAN DER HASSELT / AFP

A Paris court Friday sentenced to prison four men from a French neo-Nazi group who discussed attacks on mosques and Jewish targets in an online chat group.

A 27-year-old former voluntary police officer accused of being the ringleader received 18 years in jail, the longest term, with the judge concluding he had “an undeniable influence over the group.”

The man, Alexandre Gilet, was arrested after police learned he had ordered equipment that could be used for making explosives and was found in possession of weapons, including two Kalashnikov machine guns.

The other three men, one of whom was a minor at the time, were given lighter prison terms ranging from five to three years. They are expected to serve non-custodial sentences.

Prosecutors alleged during the trial that the four men, now aged between 22 and 28, joined a private internet chat group called “Operation WaffenKraft”, where talks “very quickly turned to the preparation of terrorist projects”.

The Waffen-SS was the military branch of the Nazi’s elite SS corps, which was founded by Adolf Hitler.

The chat group discussed targets, including mosques as well as the headquarters of the Jewish council (CRIF) and the office of the anti-Jewish discrimination league (LICRA).

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CRIME

Woman files complaint against French zoo over wolf attack

A woman seriously injured by wolves at the weekend while jogging in a safari park outside Paris has filed a criminal complaint against the attraction.

Woman files complaint against French zoo over wolf attack

The Thoiry zoo, west of Paris, failed to meet its safety obligations, the 37-year-old victim argues, after she was attacked by three wolves in an area normally off-limits to pedestrians, her lawyer told AFP.

Prosecutors in nearby Versailles have already opened a case into suspected unintentional wounding.

The woman’s condition has stabilised after she was rushed to hospital, but she is unable to speak because of the injuries to her larynx, her lawyer Cosima Ouhioun said.

“She hopes her case will serve to set adequate safety standards in the animal park so that this never happens again,” Ouihoun added.

In a police report seen by AFP, the woman said she had arrived at Thoiry late Saturday with her mother and two-year-old son to stay in a lodge in the park’s wolf zone.

Such stays are advertised on Thoiry’s website at between €220 and €760 per night, promising ‘silence, rest and disconnection’.

She set out for a jog on Sunday morning ahead of their planned departure, insisting that a park ranger had told her there was no danger as the animals were kept in enclosures.

Following a path, she reached the zoo’s American safari zone without encountering any warning that animals might be roaming free.

On her way, she encountered a single green sign with text – but no danger symbols indicating danger to pedestrians.

Chief executive of Wow Safari Thoiry, Christelle Bercheny, said such signs communicate a ‘survival guide’ for the park.

Soon after passing the sign, the woman reported seeing a bear to her left and a wolf to the right.

She tried to stay calm and maintain eye contact as she withdrew, but was spotted by the wolf, who chased her and attacked her calves.

Two more joined in the attack, biting her on the thighs and back and bringing her down before attacking her throat.

A zookeeper who was in the area intervened after hearing her screams for help and called first responders.

Thoiry zoo said it had opened an internal investigation to, “analyse all the circumstances that may have led to this incident”.

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