French Police Question Man over Contacts with Nice Killer
A 47-year-old man believed to have been in contact
with the suspected knifeman who killed three people at a church in the French
city of Nice has been detained for questioning, a judicial source said Friday.
The man was detained late Thursday after the attack
in Nice's Notre-Dame basilica by a 21-year-old Tunisian who arrived in France
on October 9.
France's anti-terror prosecutor Jean-Francois Ricard
said the attacker, identified as Brahim Aouissaoui, entered the church in the
center of the city at around 8:30 am.
He slit the throats of a 60-year-old woman and a
55-year-old man who worked at the church, and stabbed a 44-year-old woman who
managed to flee but later died of her wounds.
The victims were "people targeted for the sole
reason that they were present in this church at that moment," Ricard said
at a press conference late Thursday.
President Emmanuel Macron called it a terrorist
attack, and the government has placed its terror alert at maximum ahead of the
Catholic holiday of All Saints Day on Sunday.
France will not "give up on our values,"
Macron said in Nice.
Judicial sources said Aouissaoui arrived in Italy
last month and then travelled to France.
The police who shot Aouissaoui had "without any
doubt prevented an even higher toll," said chief prosecutor Jean-Francois
Ricard.
The Tunisian was seriously wounded by police and
hospitalized in life-threatening condition.
The church killings come after the October 16
beheading in a Paris suburb of history teacher Samuel Paty by an extremist
after Paty showed pupils cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.



