A Catholic priest in his mid-80s was killed with a knife and
another hostage seriously wounded on Tuesday in an attack on a church in
northern France carried out by assailants linked to Islamic State.
Both attackers were shot dead by French police and one
person was arrested in connection with the knife attack in a church in northern
France, a source close to the inquiry said on Tuesday.
Five people in all had been taken hostage during the attack.
A police source said it appeared that the attackers had slit the priest’s
throat.
Speaking at the scene of the attack in the Normandy town of
Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray, French President Francois Hollande said France should
“use all its means” in its war against the militant group, against which France
has launched air strikes in Syria and Iraq.
The president called it a “dreadful terrorist attack” and
told reporters the attackers had pledge allegiance to IS. The IS news agency
Amaq said two of its “soldiers” had carried out the attack.
“We are put to the test yet again, Hollande said. “The
threat remains very high.”
The attack is the latest in a string of deadly assaults in
Europe, including the mass killing in Nice, southern France, on Bastille Day
and four incidents in Germany.
Many of the attacks have had links to Islamist militants and
IS has called for supporters to target countries that it has been fighting,
mainly in Iraq and Syria.
Tuesday’s attack took place during morning mass at the
Saint-Etienne parish church, south of Rouen in Normandy.
The investigation was handed to the anti-terrorist unit of
the Paris prosecutor’s office.
Map of the Rouen area in northern France locating a hostage
taking in which a priest was killed.
The Archbishop of Rouen identified the slain priest as
Father Jacques Hamel and said he was 84, although others sources suggest he was
born in 1930. The Vatican condemned what it said was a “barbarous killing”.
French Interior Ministry spokesman Pierre-Henry Brandet told
France Info radio that the perpetrators have been killed by France’s BRI, an
elite police anti-crime force, when they came out of the church.
Bomb squad officers aided by sniffer dogs scoured the church
for any possible explosives.
Prime Minister Manuel Valls branded the attack “barbaric”
and said it was a blow to all Catholics and the whole of France. “We will stand
together,” Valls said on Twitter.
The attack will heap yet more pressure on Hollande to regain
control of national security, with France already under a state of emergency 10
months ahead of a presidential election.
The Normandy attack came 12 days after a 31-year-old
Tunisian Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel ploughed his heavy goods truck into a crowd
of revellers in the French Riviera city of Nice, killing 84 people. Islamic
State claimed that attack.
“Horror. Everything is being done to trigger a war of
religions,” tweeted Jean-Pierre Raffarin, a former conservative prime minister
who now heads the Senate’s foreign affairs committee.
Hollande visited the scene with Interior Minister Bernard
Cazeneuve, meeting members of the emergency services.
Cazeneuve has come under fire from Conservative politicians
for not doing enough to prevent the Bastille Day Nice attack.
French lawmakers approved a six-month extension of emergency
rule after the July 14 attack while the Socialist government also said it would
step up strikes against Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.
-HT

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