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IN PICTURES: Thousands rally across France in solidarity after beheading of teacher

Thousands of people rallied in across France on Sunday in a defiant show of solidarity with a teacher beheaded after showing pupils cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.

IN PICTURES: Thousands rally across France in solidarity after beheading of teacher
Protesters held up banners saying 'I am Samuel' in memory of slain teacher Samuel Paty. Photo: AFP

Demonstrations in Paris, Lyon, Toulouse, Strasbourg, Nantes, Marseille, Lille and Bordeaux attracted thousands, demonstrating in support of freedom of speech and in solidarity with the country's teachers.

Demonstrators on the Place de la Republique in Paris held aloft posters declaring: “No to totalitarianism of thought” and “I am a teacher” in memory of the decapitated victim Samuel Paty.

 

Demonstrators gather in the Place de la République in Paris. Photo: AFP

Some chanted “I am Samuel”, echoing the “I am Charlie” cry that travelled around the world after Islamist gunmen killed 12 people at the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine in 2015 for publishing caricatures of the Islamic prophet.

Between bursts of applause, others recited: “Freedom of expression, freedom to teach.”

A woman in Lille holds flowers and a picture of the murdered teacher. Photo: AFP

Paty's assassination has shocked the country and brought back memories of a wave of Islamist violence in 2015 that started with the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

READ ALSO The Mohammed carton beheading – what we know so far

Thousands gathered in Bordeaux, many holding 'I am a teacher' banners. Photo: AFP

Those killings saw some 1.5 million people gather on the Place de la Republique in support of freedom of expression.

Ahead of Sunday's gathering, Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer called on “everyone to support the teachers”, telling broadcaster France 2 that it was vital to show “our solidarity and unity”.

The gathering in the Place du Capitole in Toulouse. Photo: AFP

Prime Minister Jean Castex and Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo were among those present at the Paris event.

“I am here as a teacher, as a mother, as a Frenchwoman and as a republican,” said Virginie, one of those gathered.

Banners demanding freedom of expression and secularism. Photo: AFP

Online campaign against teacher

On Saturday, anti-terror prosecutor Jean-Francois Ricard said Paty had been the target of online threats prior to his murder for showing the cartoons to his civics class.

Depictions of the prophet are widely regarded as taboo in Islam.

Prime Minister Jean Castex and Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo joined the Paris rally. Photo: AFP

A photo of the teacher and a message confessing to his murder was found on the mobile phone of his killer, 18-year-old Chechen Abdullakh Anzorov, who was shot dead by police.

Witnesses said the suspect was spotted at the school on Friday asking pupils where he could find Paty.

The father of one schoolgirl had launched an online call for “mobilisation” against the teacher and had sought his dismissal from the school.

The girl's father and a known Islamist militant are among those arrested, along with four members of Anzorov's family.

An 11th person was taken into custody on Sunday, a judicial source said, without providing details.

The aggrieved father had named Paty and gave the school's address in a social media post just days before the beheading which President Emmanuel Macron has labelled an Islamist terror attack.

Suspect increasingly religious

Ricard did not say if the attacker had any links to the school, pupils or parents, or had acted independently in response to the online campaign.

The prosecutor said the attacker had been armed with a knife, an airgun and five canisters. He had fired at police and tried to stab them as they closed in on him.

He was in turn shot nine times.

The Russian embassy in Paris said the suspect's family had arrived in France from Chechnya when he was six and requested asylum.

Locals in the Normandy town of Evreux where the attacker lived described him as low key, saying he got into fights as a child but calmed down as he became increasingly religious in recent years.

Friday's attack was the second of its kind since a trial started last month over the January 2015 Charlie Hebdo massacre.

The magazine republished the cartoons in the run-up to the trial, and last month a young Pakistani man wounded two people with a meat cleaver outside the magazine's former office.

Ricard said Paty's murder illustrated “the very high-level terrorist threat” France still faces but added the attacker was not known to French intelligence services.

'Doing his job'

On Saturday, hundreds of pupils, teachers, parents and sympathisers flooded to Paty's school to lay white roses.

“For the first time, a teacher was attacked for what he teaches,” said a teacher from a neighbouring town who gave only his first name, Lionel.

According to parents and teachers, Paty had given Muslim children the option to leave the classroom before he showed the cartoons, saying he did not want their feelings hurt.

And Kamel Kabtane, rector of the mosque of Lyon and a senior Muslim figure, said Sunday that Paty had merely been “doing his job” and was “respectful” in doing so.

“These terrorists are not religious but are using religion to take power,” Kabtane told AFP.

Ministers who form France's defence council were to meet Sunday to discuss the Islamist threat.

A national tribute is to be held for Paty on Wednesday.

 

Member comments

  1. Je suis Samuel. ❤
    STOP, STOP, these radicalists must be stopped. France has freedom of speech. Like it, or leave!

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TERRORISM

Chechen arrested over Paris Olympics attack plot: ministry

French security services have arrested a Chechen teenager suspected of plotting an "Islamist-inspired" attack on a football game during the Paris Olympic Games in July and August, the interior ministry said Friday.

Chechen arrested over Paris Olympics attack plot: ministry

The DGSI domestic intelligence agency “arrested a 18-year-old of Chechen origin in Saint-Etienne” in southeast France on May 22, the ministry said, calling it the “first foiled attack against the Olympic Games”.

France is on its highest alert level for attacks ahead of the Paris Games, when around 10 million visitors and 10,000 athletes are expected.

The sport is set to take place mostly in the capital, but other towns and cities around France will also host some disciplines as well as individual games.

The arrested Chechen was suspected of “actively preparing an attack against the Geoffroy-Guichard stadium [in Saint-Etienne] during the football games that will take place there,” the interior ministry said.

“He intended to attack spectators but also security forces and die as a martyr,” the statement added.

He was charged on Sunday with terrorist conspiracy and is in pre-trial detention, the national anti-terror prosecutor’s office said in a statement to AFP.

The suspected plot could set nerves jangling in France, where organisers have faced persistent questions about the risk of an attack that would seriously tarnish the world’s biggest sporting event.

An offshoot of the Islamic State group, believed to be behind a vicious attack on a Moscow concert hall in March, is known to have threatened attacks in France.

“We applaud the efficiency of the (law enforcement) services and their exceptional mobilisation to ensure the security of the Games,” the Paris organising committee said in a statement. “Security is the number one priority for Paris 2024.”

Six football games are set to take place in Saint-Etienne, an industrial town of roughly 200,000 people about an hour’s drive west of Lyon.

They begin on July 24 with Argentina versus Morocco in the men’s competition, and include a game between the French women’s team and Canada on July 28.

France as target

Concerns about the Paris Games have focused on the opening ceremony on July 26 that will take place over a six-kilometre (four-mile) stretch of the river Seine, the first time a summer Olympics has begun outside the athletics stadium.

Policing such a vast area of the capital will be a huge challenge, with 45,000 officers set to be on duty and large swathes of the centre out of bounds for everyone except ticket holders and local residents.

France has been repeatedly targeted by Islamist attackers over the past decade, often by individuals inspired by Al-Qaeda or the Islamic State group. Three terror plots have been prevented since the start of the year and 50 since 2017, according to the interior ministry.

Lucas Webber, co-founder of the Militant Wire research network, told AFP that the Islamic State (IS) group, including its Khorasan offshoot in Afghanistan and Pakistan (ISKP), had “launched a new propaganda campaign to threaten and incite direct attacks against sporting events in Europe”.

“ISKP has led these efforts and called upon followers to carry out violent acts against the Olympics in France and the UEFA European Championship in Germany,” he said

Last October, a radicalised 20-year-old Chechen who had sworn allegiance to IS killed a teacher in the northern French town of Arras.

In October 2020, another teenage Chechen extremist, who had come to France as a refugee, beheaded a teacher in a suburb northwest of Paris, shocking the country.

The traditional Olympic torch relay is currently underway in France, with the flame on a 12,000-kilometre trip surrounded by a “security bubble” of 100 officers including anti-drone specialists and anti-terror police.

A total of 78 people were arrested for trying to disrupt the relay and 30 suspect drones were intercepted during the first three weeks, according to the interior ministry.

The Olympics have been attacked in the past — most infamously in 1972 in Munich and in 1996 in Atlanta — with the thousands of athletes, huge crowds and live global television audience making it a target.

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