‘Terror attack’: Synagogue blast suspect opens fire
A man suspected of setting fires and causing an explosion outside a synagogue in southern France has been captured after a gun battle with police.
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A man suspected of setting fires and causing an explosion outside a synagogue in southern France has been captured after a gun battle with police.
Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said “the alleged perpetrator” had been detained and that the police had shown “great professionalism”.
The suspect was shot and injured by police after he opened fire on the officers who came to arrest him in the city of Nimes, according to French media.
Earlier, a police officer was injured in the blast outside the the Beth Yaacov synagogue in the resort town of La Grande-Motte, near Montpellier.
Authorities said the incident, caused by cars which were set alight, was being treated as a potential terror attack.
The lone suspect had set multiple cars on fire in a carpark across the street from before one exploded, CNN reports.
Police sources told French media that one of the vehicles contained a hidden gas canister.
The suspect, who was said to be carrying a Palestinian flag, also set fire to several entrance doors of the synagogue, officials said.
Jewish community leader Yonathan Arfi said the incident was timed to target Saturday morning worshippers in “an attempt to kill Jews”.
French President Emmanuel Macron said the incident was “a terrorist act”.
According to The Mirror, CCTV footage showed a person fleeing the scene before the fiery explosion erupted.
French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal and Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin visited the site in the hours after the attack, with both condemning the attack and Mr Attal calling it “an antisemitic act”.
“What happened here shocks and scandalises all Republicans in our country,” Mr Attat said during the visit.
“Because the reality is that once again, French Jews have been targeted, attacked because of their beliefs.”
Mr Attal said an “absolute tragedy” had been “narrowly avoided” as “there would have been victims” if the synagogue had been full of worshippers.
Former French President Francoise Hollande posted on X: “When a synagogue is attacked, it is France that is targeted. It is unanimous that anti-Semitism must be denounced and fought. I give my unwavering support to all the Jews of France who must be able to live their faith in complete safety.”
Lorsqu'une synagogue est attaquée, c'est la France qui est visée. Câest unanimement que l'antisémitisme doit être dénoncé et combattu. J'apporte mon soutien sans faille à tous les juifs de France qui doivent pouvoir vivre leur foi en toute sécurité. pic.twitter.com/CvisktyZJU
— François Hollande (@fhollande) August 24, 2024
Renaud Muselier, a French politician who is the President of the Regional Council of Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur, shared a photo and said on X: “Support for the Jewish community of La Grande-Motte and France, after this arson attack on the Beth Yaacov synagogue! ️
Soutien à la communauté juive de la Grande-Motte et de France, après cet incendie criminel perpétré contre la synagogue Beth Yaacov ! â¡ï¸
— Renaud Muselier (@RenaudMuselier) August 24, 2024
Sâattaquer à des croyants, et à un lieu de culte, est dâune lâcheté sans borne.
Les coupables de cette attaque, manifestement antisémite,⦠pic.twitter.com/ErRwAxjug6
“Attacking believers and a place of worship is boundless cowardice.
“Those responsible for this attack, which was clearly anti-Semitic, will have to answer for their actions without any clemency on our part.”
La Motte, which has around 8,500 permanent residents, is a popular seaside resort and visited by more than 100,000 tourists every year.
Earlier this month, Darmanin said that the government had counted 887 anti-Semitic acts in France in the first half of 2024, nearly three times as many as in the same period in 2023.
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Originally published as ‘Terror attack’: Synagogue blast suspect opens fire