France Makes New Arrests Over Nice Church Attack

French police have made two new arrests in the probe
into an attack on a church in the southern city of Nice that left three dead,
as authorities seek to understand the profile of the suspected killer, judicial
sources said on Sunday.
Authorities are now holding a total of six people
for questioning to understand if they were linked to Tunisian Brahim Issaoui,
who prosecutors say carried out the knife rampage early Thursday morning in the
Notre-Dame Basilica.
It so far remains unclear if he had outside help for
the attack, which French President Emmanuel Macron has described as an act of
"Islamist" terror and was the latest of a string of attacks in recent
weeks in France.
The latest people to be detained are aged 25 and 63
and were arrested on Saturday at the residence of an individual detained
earlier in the day, a judicial source told AFP, asking not to be named.
Three others detained earlier over suspected links
to Issaoui remain in custody.
Issaoui was shot by police multiple times and is
currently in a serious condition in hospital. Investigators have been unable to
question him and his precise motivations remain unclear.
"It is still too early to say if there were
others complicit, what his motivations were in coming to France and when this
idea took root in him," another source close to the inquiry who asked not
to be named said Saturday.
The source said information from two telephones
belonging to him and also an investigation being undertaken by the Tunisian
authorities would be decisive in the probe.
Investigators believe Issaoui travelled illegally to
Europe via Italy's Mediterranean island of Lampedusa on September 20.
He arrived at the mainland Italian port of Bari on
October 9 before coming to Nice just two days before the attack.
France is on edge after the republication in early
September of cartoons of the prophet Mohammed by the Charlie Hebdo weekly,
which was followed by an attack outside its former offices, the beheading of a
teacher and now the attack in Nice.
On Saturday, an attacker armed with a sawn-off
shotgun seriously wounded a Greek Orthodox priest in a shooting outside a
church in the French city of Lyon.
Nikolaos Kakavelaki, 52, was closing his Lyon church
mid-afternoon when he was attacked and is now in a serious condition in
hospital, said a police source who asked not to be named.
The attacker fled the scene but Lyon's public
prosecutor later announced that a suspect had been arrested while adding that
the motivation for the attack was not clear.