Attack on French soldiers not linked to terror

People walk next to the mosque of Valence, a day after a driver was shot and wounded as he drove a car at four soldiers guarding the mosque.

Paris - A French prosecutor says the French citizen of Tunisian descent is a practising Muslim, but the attack is not a terrorist attack.

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By AP

Published: Sat 2 Jan 2016, 6:54 PM

Last updated: Sat 2 Jan 2016, 9:00 PM

A French prosecutor said investigators found no links between a man who rammed his car into four soldiers guarding a mosque in the southeastern city of Valence and "a terrorist network or terrorist act."
The man was stopped on Friday when a soldier fired and wounded him. France is on high alert after the coordinated attacks by Daesh extremists in Paris on November 13.
Prosecutor Alex Perrin said on Saturday "so far it seems to be the act of an individual."
Perrin said the 29-year-old French citizen of Tunisian descent is a practising Muslim not reported as radicalised. He was not known to the police and justice services and has no psychiatric history.
His motives remain unclear.
Perrin said the man claimed in confused comments that he wanted "to kill soldiers because soldiers kill people."
He notably said "Allahu Akbar," or "God is great," which "shows a link with a certain religiosity," Perrin detailed.
No weapons or explosive devices have been found inside his car.
The man, who is still hospitalised, could be charged in coming days with "attempted murders against persons holding state authority."
The attacker twice rammed his car into the soldiers guarding the main mosque in Valence, the prosecutor said, charging once, then putting his car into reverse to try to ram the soldiers again.
The soldiers fired warning shots and then fired to disable the driver, who was hit in the arm and leg. In total, over 30 shots were fired.
One soldier was slightly injured in the leg, and a passerby was hit in the leg by a stray bullet.
France has been in a state of emergency since the November 13 Paris attacks, claimed by the Daesh group, that killed 130 people and injured hundreds more. The soldiers by the mosque are part of the reinforced security guarding places of worship and other sensitive sites around France.

AP

Published: Sat 2 Jan 2016, 6:54 PM

Last updated: Sat 2 Jan 2016, 9:00 PM

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