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Three killed in grisly stabbing attack at Nice church

Suspected assailant detained; one victim’s throat slit; attack comes amid high alert in France following protests over Muhammad cartoons

French members of the elite tactical police unit RAID enter the Basilica of Notre-Dame de Nice as forensics officers wait outside after a knife attack in Nice on October 29, 2020. (Valery HACHE / AFP)
French members of the elite tactical police unit RAID enter the Basilica of Notre-Dame de Nice as forensics officers wait outside after a knife attack in Nice on October 29, 2020. (Valery HACHE / AFP)

A knife-wielding man killed three people at a church in the French city of Nice on Thursday, slitting the throat of at least one of them, in what officials are treating as the latest jihadist attack to rock the country.

The assailant “kept repeating ‘Allahu Akbar’ (God is Greater) even while under medication” after he was injured during his arrest, Nice’s Mayor Christian Estrosi told journalists at the scene.

A man and a woman died at the Basilica of Notre-Dame, in the heart of the Mediterranean resort city, while a third person succumbed to injuries after seeking refuge in a nearby bar, a police source told AFP.

The suspected assailant was detained by security forces shortly after the attack, a police source said.

“The situation is now under control,” police spokeswoman Florence Gavello said.

French policemen stand guard a street after a knife attack in Nice on October 29, 2020. (Photo by Valery HACHE / AFP)

The prosecutor’s office and national police said that an investigation was opened into an attack with a terrorist connection after Thursday’s stabbing. The exact motive of the attack was unclear but comes as France is under high alert for terrorist acts amid tensions over the publication of caricatures of the Muslim prophet Muhammad and after two other recent attacks.

“I can confirm that everything leads us to think this was a terror attack in the Notre-Dame Basilica,” Estrosi tweeted. He called the incident an “Islamo-fascist attack.”

Images on French media showed the neighborhood locked down and surrounded by police and emergency vehicles. Sounds of explosions could be heard as sappers exploded suspicious objects.

No mass was underway at the time of the attack, but the church opens around 8 a.m. and “people come in to pray at all hours,” Father Philippe Asso, who serves at the basilica, told AFP.

Daniel Conilh, a 32-year-old waiter at the Grand Cafe de Lyon, a block from the church, said it was shortly before 9 a.m. when “shots were fired and everybody took off running.”

“A woman came in straight from the church and said, ‘Run, run, someone has been stabbing people,'” he told AFP, and dozens of police and rescue vehicles quickly sealed off the neighborhood.

France has been on terror alert since the January 2015 massacre at the satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo, which marked the beginning of a wave of jihadist attacks that have killed more than 250 people.

French policemen stand guard after a knife attack in Nice on October 29, 2020. (Valery HACHE / AFP)

Tensions have run especially high since the trial of suspected accomplices in that attack opened in September, an event the paper marked by republishing cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed that infuriated millions of Muslims worldwide.

Just days later, an 18-year-old man from Pakistan seriously injured two people with a meat cleaver outside Charlie Hebdo’s former offices in Paris.

Emmanuel Macron’s office said the president would travel to Nice on Thursday, just days before French Catholics mark the All Saint’s Day holiday on November 1.

The Nice attack comes just days after thousands rallied across France in solidarity with a teacher beheaded for having shown pupils cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.

The history teacher, Samuel Paty, was killed by an 18-year-old Chechen man, Abdullakh Anzorov, who committed the gruesome crime outside Paty’s school in a Paris suburb after the teacher was denounced by angry parents on social media.

Demonstrators shout slogans beside a burning effigy of French President Emmanuel Macron during a protest following Macron’s comments over the Prophet Mohammed caricatures, in Quetta on October 27, 2020. (Banaras KHAN / AFP)

His murder prompted Macron to promise a crackdown on Islamic extremism, including shutting down mosques and organizations accused of fomenting radicalism and violence.

But the move has inflamed tensions with many Muslims saying Macron is unfairly targeting France’s estimated five to six million Muslims — the largest community in Europe.

In another attack likely linked to the spreading anger, an unidentified man stabbed a security guard outside the French Consulate in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The guard was taken to a local hospital in stable condition. Saudi security forces arrested the suspect.

“The French Embassy in Saudi Arabia…reiterates its support for the victim and its trust in Saudi authorities in uncovering the circumstances of the incident as well as in guaranteeing the security of French diplomatic institutions and the French expatriate community in the Kingdom,” the embassy said in a statement following the attack.

Protests against France have erupted in several Muslim countries, with some urging a boycott of French goods, and tensions have flared in particular between Macron and Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

In Nice, painful memories remain fresh of the jihadist attack during the Bastille Day fireworks on July 14, 2016, when a man rammed his truck into a crowded promenade, killing 86 people.

Just a few days later, two teenagers murdered an 85-year-old priest as he conducted mass at his church in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray in northern France, an attack later claimed by the Islamic State group.

Thursday’s attack drew condemnation from France’s allies, with Germany’s Angela Merkel voicing solidarity with France and EU Parliament President David Sassoli saying: “This pain is felt by all of us in Europe.

“We have a duty to stand together against violence and those that seek to incite and spread hatred,” he said on Twitter.

Italy’s Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte condemned a “vile attack” but vowed it “will not shake the common front defending the values of freedom and peace.”

Abdallah Zekri, director general of the French Council of Muslim Worship (CFCM), said: “I can only denounce as strongly as possible this act of cowardice against the innocent.”

Zekri called on French Muslims to cancel festivities to mark the Mawlid, or the Prophet’s Birthday, which ends Thursday, “in solidarity with the victims and their loved ones.”

Estrosi, meanwhile, called for churches around the country to be given added security or to be closed as a precaution.

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