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French police officer stabbed in suspected terror attack in Cannes

A French police officer was attacked early on Monday morning after a man claiming to act "in the name of the prophet" stabbed him in the southern city of Cannes.

French police officer stabbed in suspected terror attack in Cannes
Illustration photo: Bertrand Guay/AFP

The incident is being treating the incident as a possible terrorist attack.

The policeman was behind the wheel of a car in front of a police station at 6.30 am he was attacked.

Interior minister Gérald Darmanin later clarified that the officer had not been physically injured, thanks to his bulletproof vest.

French media reported that four police officers, including a young officer and a trainee, were about to go on patrol and were in their car, parked in an alleyway at the back of the Cannes central police station.

The assailant is reported to have approached and used the excuse of a request for information to have the rear window opened. The man struck one officer with a knife in the chest – hitting his bullet-proof vest.

Laurent Martin de Frémont, spokesman for the Unité SGP Police-FO union, told Le Parisien: “The officer’s clothes and bulletproof vest were in a catastrophic state. It shows you the strength, the will, the power of the gesture. The clothes were torn, the bullet-proof vest was attacked right down to the plate that protects us.

“In other words, we are dealing with someone who wanted to kill a cop.”

The incident is being treated as a possible terrorist attack, and Darmanin announced he was heading to the scene.

The attacker was severely injured by another police officer who opened fire, and was in a serious condition.

French police have been targeted in a series of attacks from Islamic extremists in recent years, leading to calls for better protection and harsher jail sentences.

In April, a police employee was stabbed to death in the secure entrance to a station in the quiet Paris commuter town of Rambouillet, while an officer was seriously wounded in a knife attack near the western city of Nantes in May.

In October 2019, three officers and one police employee in Paris were stabbed to death in the headquarters of the Paris police by a radicalised IT employee.

Each attack has sharpened attention on the danger of Islamic extremism in France, which has suffered a wave of violence over the last decade from radicals inspired by al-Qaeda or the Islamic State group.
 

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CRIME

French police search for gunmen after shootings in Paris suburb

French police were searching for gunmen after three people were killed in drug-related shootings in the Paris suburb of Sevran over the weekend.

French police search for gunmen after shootings in Paris suburb

Two men were shot dead near a cultural centre in the Seine-Saint-Denis suburb, to the northeast of the French capital on Sunday evening, less than 48 hours after another fatal shooting nearby, according to authorities.

The victims of Sunday’s shooting were aged 35 and 31 and known for violence and drug trafficking, according to police sources.

One was shot in the head, with two suspects fleeing on foot, leaving the magazine of an automatic weapon and 18 spent bullet casings behind them.

The second man was hit six times.

The town of 52,000 people was on edge, mayor Stephane Blanchet told AFP, saying people were living in fear of another shooting.

“There is a huge feeling of fear, that it could start again and [that someone could be hit by] a stray bullet,” Blanchet said.

“If it had been a beautiful sunny day, there would have been more people outside,” when the latest shooting happened, he said.

In the first shooting, a 28-year-old man was killed on a nearby housing estate early on Saturday, with three others wounded.

In March, French President Emmanuel Macron announced an ‘XXL’ cleanup of drug trafficking in the southern port city of Marseille and other towns across France, including Sevran, where the drugs trade has been blamed for a spate of death and violence.

One drug dealing hotspot in Sevran was ‘eradicated’ in that operation, police said.

“We are aware that when we do that, we destabilise traffic, we create greed and sometimes there are clashes,” Paris police chief Laurent Nunez said on Sunday.

“But we will still continue,” he added.

Local La France insoumise MP Clementine Autain accused the government of abandoning some areas, and said the suburb, “did not have the police presence of other areas”.

Drug-related violence has often flared in Sevran – considered a hub of drug trafficking in France – with the then-mayor calling for UN peacekeepers to be deployed there in 2011.

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