Attack in Nice: Police probe suspect's ties
October 30, 2020A man has been taken into custody over his alleged ties to the suspected knifeman who killed three people at a church in Nice, media reported on Friday.
French authorities took a 47-year-old man in for questioning on suspicion he may have been in contact with the attacker, according to several news agencies citing judicial sources.
The man was detained late Thursday in the aftermath of the attack in the Notre Dame Basilica at the heart of the Mediterranean city.
The main suspect has been identified as a 21-year-old Tunisian man who was shot by police and hospitalized in life-threatening condition and under police surveillance.
Investigators said the attacker entered the church on Thursday morning before cutting the throat of a 55-year-old man who worked at the church and nearly decapitating a 60-year-old woman. He also stabbed a 44-year-old woman who fled the church and later died of her wounds.
Read more: France knife attack: World leaders condemn Nice killings
French President Emmanuel Macron has described the killings as an "Islamist terrorist attack," with the government placing France's terror alert at its maximum level. Macron will hold an emergency meeting over the attack with his ministers later on Friday.
Nice's police chief spoke of a risk of further attacks and that Christian and French state sites were likely targets.
The government said more soldiers will be deployed to protect key sites such as places of worship and schools.
On Friday afternoon, police in Paris overpowered a man who was threatening officers with two knives, Reuters reported. No one was injured.
What do we know about the attacker?
France's anti-terror persecutor, Jean-Francois Ricard, said the 21-year-old suspect arrived in Europe in late September on the Italian island of Lampedusa.
He arrived in France on October 9 and traveled to Nice by train early on Thursday morning before the attack.
Ricard said the 21-year-old man was carrying three knives, two phones and a copy of the Quran.
France in shock
On Friday morning, residents in Nice expressed shock over what happened, reported DW correspondent Lisa Louis.
"We had our son baptized here," Nice resident Christophe Bremard told DW outside the church where the attack took place. "It's just too much — terror, the lockdown. I feel lost."
The attack in Nice is the third deadly knife attack in three months that French authorities have attributed to terrorism.
Steinmeier: Do not let hate dictate a response
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said European democracies have to stand up to acts of brutality, but he also cautioned against "hate and xenophobia."
"I believe what we in Europe, and not just in France, must do now is to stand up to this act of brutality and the Islamist motives behind it," he told DW in an exclusive interview. "In our democratic societies, above all, we should not base the response of the state on a course determined by hate and xenophobia."
The church killings come after the October 16 killing of history teacher Samuel Paty who was beheaded by an extremist outside his school in a Paris suburb. The attack came after Paty showed students cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad during a lesson on freedom of speech.
France has been the subject of protests and boycotts after Macron pledged to fight "Islamist separatism" and defended the controversial cartoons of Muhammad, saying he won't renounce them.
Thursday's attack in Nice also brought up painful memories of the 2016 terror attack when more than 80 people were killed when a Tunisian immigrant drove a truck into crowds celebrating Bastille Day.
rs/sms (AFP, Reuters)