A large knife wielding young man attacked three French soldiers earlier yesterday as they patrolled in front of a Jewish community center in southern France. He and a possible accomplice were detained and a terror investigation was launched, authorities said.
Sarah Baron, a police union official in the city of “Nice”, said the attacker was detained after the attack. “Nice” Mayor Christian Estrosi said the attacker (n keeping with past terrorist practice) had an identity card with the name Moussa Coulibaly and a possible accomplice of his was also detained.
The Charlie Hebdo attackers were also apprehended after one of them had left their identity cards in the gateway vehicle
The surname, which is relatively common for families of Malian descent, is the same as that of the man who last month killed four hostages in a kosher supermarket in Paris and gunned down a policewoman.
Yesterday’s attacker was armed with “two huge knives that actually resembled more a machete than a knife,” said Philippe Pradel, a security official with Nice city hall, said on BFM television, a local media channel. “He freely attacked a soldier, but the knife was ineffective because the soldier was wearing a flak jacket. So then he tried to attack his face.”
Another police official said the attacker pulled a knife at least 20 centimeters (8 inches) long out of a bag and set upon one of the soldiers, injuring him in the chin. He then swiped two other soldiers one in the cheek, the other in the forearm before being apprehended by riot police, the official added.
The attacker, aged about 30, had a record of theft and violence, the official said on condition of anonymity because the investigation was ongoing. His motive was not yet clear, the official added.
France has been on high alert since the attacks in Paris by three Islamic extremists that left 20 people dead, including the gunmen. More than 10,000 soldiers have been deployed around the country to protect sensitive locations, including major shopping areas, synagogues, mosques and transit hubs.
Earlier Tuesday, French authorities arrested seven men and a woman suspected of being involved in sending fighters to join terrorists in Syria. Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said, however, those arrested in the Paris and Lyon areas were not suspected of links to the Jan. 7-9 terror attackers in Paris.