Man shot dead in Paris airport security scare
PARIS, March 18, 2017 (AFP) - Troops at Paris' Orly airport on Saturday shot dead a man who tried to grab a soldier's weapon, triggering a major security scare that shut down the airport and left thousands of travellers stranded.
PARIS, March 18, 2017 (AFP) - Troops at Paris' Orly airport on Saturday shot dead a man who tried to grab a soldier's weapon, triggering a major security scare that shut down the airport and left thousands of travellers stranded.
Nobody was hurt in the incident which comes as France remains on
high alert following a series of jihadist attacks that have claimed over 230
lives since January 2015. Prosecutors said they had launched an anti-terrorism
investigation.
France goes to the polls on April 23 in the first round of a
two-stage presidential election, in which security is one of the main issues on
voters' minds.
The latest shooting also came on the second day of an official
visit to Paris by Britain's Prince William and his wife Kate.
Interior Minister Bruno Le Roux said the slain man had been
linked to an earlier attack on police north of Paris, in which an officer was
slightly wounded, and was "known to the police and intelligence services".
The incident took place at around 8:30am (0730GMT) in the
Orly-Sud terminal at the smaller of Paris' two international airports, located
south of the capital.
"A man took a weapon from a soldier then hid in a shop in
the airport before being shot dead by security forces," an interior
ministry spokesman told AFP. No-one was injured.
Addressing reporters at the airport Le Roux later said that the
man had tried "but not succeeded" in grabbing the rifle of the female
soldier on patrol with two male colleagues.
Le Roux said the man was suspected of earlier opening fire on
police during a routine traffic inspection in the northern suburb of
Garges-les-Gonesse at around 7:00am (0600GMT). One officer suffered minor head
injuries.
He was suspected of then stealing a car in another suburb and
driving to Orly, Le Roux said. Police sources said he was aged 39.
A witness to the events at the airport told BFM TV he saw the
man in possession of the soldier's rifle and threatening her.
"The soldiers were trying to reason with him," he
said, adding that as he fled the scene he heard two shots.
Franck Lecam, a traveller bound for Tel Aviv, told AFP he heaed
"three or four shots" nearby as he was queuing to check in.
"There are policemen, emergency workers and soldiers
everywhere," he said after being forced to evacuate the terminal with
around 3,000 others.
Air traffic to Orly was suspended and all incoming flights
rerouted to Charles de Gaulle airport north of Paris.
Several planes that were preparing for takeoff or had just
landed in Orly were grounded on the tarmac while the security operation
unfolded.
Passengers in the Orly-Ouest terminal were confined in the
building.
Elite police teams intervened quickly to secure the airport and
search it for possible explosivesm but none were found.
France is still in a state of emergency after a series of terror
attacks, including the November 2015 massacre in Paris and a truck attack in
Nice, in July last year. In mid-February, an Egyptian staged a machete attack
in Paris's Louvre museum before being shot and wounded.
- 'Policemen everywhere' -
The soldier from whom the man took the weapon was a part of
Operation Sentinelle, deployed after the January 2015 Paris attacks.
It involves some 7,000 troops of whom roughly half are deployed
in the Paris region. They are charged with guarding religious sites which could
be targets of terror attacks as well as airports, railway stations and tourist
spots.
A notice was posted on the Paris airports authority website
urging passengers not to travel to Orly.
Budget airlines easyJet said in a statement that "like all
other airlines" it expected interruptions and flight delays, adding that
46 ot its flights were due to fly in and out of the airport on Saturday.
On Thursday, a letter bomb exploded at the Paris offices of the
International Monetary Fund, injuring a secretary who suffered burns to her
hands and face.
French President Francois Hollande called it an
"attack", saying it showed the country was "still
targeted".
"All this leads me to justify the state of emergency"
that has been in effect since November 2015, Hollande said.
Man shot dead at Orly 'known to intelligence'
A man who was shot dead
at Paris' Orly airport on Saturday after seizing a gun from a soldier was known
to intelligence services, the French interior minister said, as prosecutors
opened an anti-terror investigation.
The man is suspected of being the same one who shot and wounded
at a police officer earlier Saturday during a routine check north of Paris,
Interior Minister Bruno Le Roux said.
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