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Killings At School In France Follow Earlier Murders Of Soldiers

 
 
Reply Mon 19 Mar, 2012 12:49 pm
Killings At School In France Follow Earlier Murders Of Soldiers
March 19, 2012
by Mark Memmott

Young people walk away from the Ozar Hatorah Jewish school, on Monday in Toulouse, southwestern France, where at least four people (three of them children) were killed and one seriously wounded when a gunman opened fire. It was the third gun attack in a week by a man who fled on a motorbike.

There are fears in France today that the killings of at least four people outside a Jewish school in the city of Toulouse are linked to earlier murders of three soldiers and that the victims were targeted because they belonged to ethnic or religious minorities.

According to France 24, and other news outlets, today's victims include a rabbi who was teaching Yiddish at the school and his two young sons. The boys, The Associated Press reports, were 3- and 6-years-old. The other person killed was reportedly a child between the age of 8 and 10. A 17-year-old was seriously wounded, news outlets say.

Witnesses say the gunman arrived on a scooter. And as the BBC writes, "police say there are similarities with the killings of three soldiers in two separate incidents the same part of France last week. All three — of North African origin — were shot by a man on a scooter."

France 24 says that the French newspaper LeFigaro is reporting that "spent cartridges found at the scene on Monday were of the same .45 calibre as cartridges used in the [other] shootings last week. The paper also reported that police sources believed it was the same killer."

The BBC adds that "Monday's attack happened as children and their parents were arriving at the Ozar Hatorah school, in the Joliment area of the city, for the start of the school day. Local prosecutor Michel Valet said ... 'he shot at everything he could see, children and adults, and some children were chased into the school.' "

Update at 11:50 a.m. ET. Reports: Police Sources Say Same Gun Was Used:

The Associated Press, France 24 and some other outlets are reporting that "police sources" say the gun used in today's killing was also used during the other recent murders.

Update at 11:10 a.m. ET. Latest Lede From The Associated Press:

"A motorcycle gunman opened fire Monday in front of a Jewish school in the French city of Toulouse, killing a rabbi, his two young sons and a schoolgirl, the prosecutor's office said. It was the third deadly motorcycle shooting in the same area in recent days."

Update at 10:45 a.m. ET. More On The Killings And Aftermath:

"What the victims have in common is that they belong to, or are associated with, ethnic or religious minorities - North African, Caribbean and Jewish," the BBC says. "In one respect, however, the third attack appears different: the gunman reportedly fired indiscriminately inside the school grounds."

"FRANCE 24 correspondent Chris Bockman said the city was in 'lockdown' as police searched for the gunman. 'But this is a medieval city with narrow winding roads, where it is easy for a scooter to outrun a police car,' he added."
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
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Reply Thu 22 Mar, 2012 10:56 am
@BumbleBeeBoogie,
Suspect In French Killing Spree Is Dead
March 22, 2012
by Mark Memmott - NPR

Members of a special police force unit at the site of the standoff in Toulouse, France, today.

After a massive manhunt and a two-day standoff at an apartment building in Toulouse, French authorities say a man who claimed to be a member of al-Qaida and to have killed seven people in recent weeks is now dead himself.

According to French Interior Minister Claude Guéant, in the hour before 7 a.m. ET there was a dramatic conclusion to the saga that had gripped France and gotten the attention of people around the world.

After special police units stormed the apartment of French-Algerian Mohammed Merah, Guéant said, the suspect fired at the officers and then jumped from a window — still blasting away. "He was found dead on the ground," Guéant told reporters.

Merah, said to be 23 or 24 years old, was the lone suspect in the murders of three French soldiers earlier this month and an attack on a Jewish school on Monday that left three children and a rabbi dead.

French officials said that in negotiations with Merah during the standoff he claimed to be a member of al-Qaida and to have carried out the murders in revenge for the deaths of Palestinian children and to protest the French military's presence in Afghanistan.

As you'll see below, we posted earlier on the signs that the standoff was drawing to a close, and on the breaking news of the suspect's death.

Here, courtesy of France 24, is audio from Guéant's announcement (with English translation).

French Interior Minister Claude Guéant (translated)

Update at 10 a.m. ET. He Was Shot In The Head, Official Says:

"A French prosecutor says that a gunman who claimed responsibility for a radical Islam-inspired killing spree was shot in the head by police," The Associated Press reports. It hasn't been reported yet whether it was the gunshot, the fall from a height or a combination of the two that killed him.

Update at 8:45 a.m. ET. Sarkozy Says Those Who Often Visit Terrorism-Related Websites Will Be Prosecuted:

The Associated Press writes that "French President Nicolas Sarkozy says an investigation is under way to see if the suspect in a series of radical Islam-inspired killings had any accomplices. Sarkozy also said that anyone who regularly visits 'websites which support terrorism or call for hate or violence will be punished by the law.' He promised a crackdown on anyone who goes abroad 'for the purposes of indoctrination in terrorist ideology.' "

Update at 8:25 a.m. ET. From The Associated Press:

"The death of Mohamed Merah, 23, ended a more than 32-hour standoff with an elite police squad trying to capture him alive. Merah was wanted in the deaths of seven people, three paratroopers, three Jewish schoolchildren and a rabbi, all killed over 10 days. Another student and another paratrooper were wounded in his attacks."

Update at 7:05 a.m. ET. Suspect Is Dead, Interior Minister Says:

French Interior Minister Claude Guéant just announced on national television that the man suspected in the recent killings of seven people in and around Toulouse, France, is dead. Guéant said that after police stormed the suspect's apartment, he jumped from a window — still firing back at authorities, the minister said.

We'll have more in a moment.

Our original post, from 6:50 a.m. ET:

It's too soon to say it's all over, but there are signs that the long standoff with a man suspected of killing at least seven people in and around Toulouse, France, may be near an end.

France 24 reports "elite forces have entered [the] Toulouse suspect's apartment, police sources say."

The BBC says "gunfire was heard near the apartment block in the city of Toulouse, with reports police had met resistance but that the suspect was now dead." That report of the suspect being dead is not confirmed.

According to The Associated Press, gunfire and explosions have been heard. The standoff is now in its second day.

The man thought to be inside the apartment, French-Algerian Mohammed Merah, is wanted for the killings of three soldiers earlier this month, and three Jewish schoolchildren and a rabbi this week.

As NPR's Corey Flintoff wrote for us Wednesday, Merah has reportedly claimed to be a member of al-Qaida and has told authorities he carried out the killings to avenge the deatlsh of Palestinian children and to protest the French military's presence in Afghanistan.

We will keep an eye on what's happening and update this post as the story develops.
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