Terror probe opened after 2 wounded in Paris knife attack
France opened an anti-terror investigation
after two journalists were stabbed in Paris on Friday near the former offices
of the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine that was attacked by Islamist militants
in 2015.
Prime Minister Jean Castex, who rushed to the
scene, said the main attacker had been arrested. A second person was also in
custody.
"I was in my office. I heard screams in
the road. I looked out of the window and saw a woman who was lying on the floor
and had taken a whack in the face from what was possibly a machete," a
witness told Europe 1 radio.
Another neighbor, who heard the attack, told
Reuters there was a long, deathly shout from "a person who was screaming
and screaming."
Castex said the two wounded were attacked at
random when taking a cigarette break. The life of neither was in danger, he
said.
"This attack happened in a symbolic place
at the time when the trial of the terrible attacks on Charlie Hebdo took
place," he said.
Europe 1 radio quoted police officials as
saying the main suspect was 18, was known to security services and was born in
Pakistan.
One police source said a machete had been
found at the scene. Another police sources said a meat cleaver had been found
there.
The national anti-terrorism prosecutor's
office said it was investigating the case.
Fourteen people went on trial in Paris on
Sept. 2, accused of being accomplices in the attack on the Charlie Hebdo
offices in January 2015 that killed 12 people.
The court heard that they had sought to avenge
the Prophet Mohammad, nearly a decade after the weekly published cartoons
mocking him.
Police moved Charlie Hebdo's head of Human
Resources from her home this week after threats against her life.
On Friday, TV footage showed ambulances, fire
trucks and police cordoning off the area around Charlie Hebdo's former offices.
Images on social media showed a person being
stretchered away.
Paul Moreira, a journalist from Premiere Ligne
media production company told BFM TV, that two of his colleagues had been
wounded.
"It's somebody who was in the road with a
meat cleaver who attacked them in front of our offices. It was chilling,"
he said.
The Paris metro closed lines in the area and
school children were initially kept inside in an area around the attack, a city
hall official said.
France has experienced a wave of attacks by
Islamist militants in recent years.
Bombings and shootings in November 2015 at the
Bataclan theatre and other sites around Paris killed 130 people, and in July
2016 an Islamist militant drove a truck through a crowd celebrating Bastille
Day in Nice, killing 86.



