Stabbing in Villeurbanne, France by an Afghani Islamist

A 33-year-old Afghani asylum seeker carried out an
attack in Villeurbanne, a Lyon suburb, in southeastern France leaving one
person was killed and eight others wounded, three of the injured are in
critical condition, officials said.
The man, who has no identity papers, said his name
is Sultan Marmed Niazi.
An eyewitness in Villeurbanne, a suburb of Lyon,
described the attack as frenzied. “There was a man at the 83 [bus stop] who
started striking out with a knife in all directions,” person interviewed by
Radio Scope said.
The bus driver asked him why the attacker did that and
he replied that because they “don't read Quran”.
Police arrested the suspected attacker and were
holding him in custody on suspicion of murder and attempted murder.
The attacker appears on a video broadcast on social
networks talking to some people on the side of the road and beat by the hands
of one of them and says, God willing.
Knife attacks in Europe have multiplied since ISIS
demanded in its leaflets to “cut the throats of Westerners”.
In France, two young students were killed in
Marseille in October 2017 by an illegal Tunisian immigrant.
In February 2018, a Chechen citizen stabbed a
student to death in Paris's Monsigny Avenue.
On September 9, 2018, in Paris, Sarasha Ali Khan, an
Afghan born in Jalalabad in 1987, stabbed seven people in Paris
indiscriminately.
France tolerates illegal immigrants who come to its
territory, many of them applying for asylum, and France cannot sort the 120,000
applications it receives each year (2018).
The detention centers for asylum-seekers that meet
their applications for refusal are saturated so the administration is releasing
thousands of these illegal immigrants.
Thus, Ahmed Hannachi was released from a detention
center despite his illegal status with the obligation to leave the country,
allowing him to kill Moran and Laura at the St Charles station in Marseille in
October 2017.