PARIS (AP)
— With explosions and gunfire, security forces Friday ended three days of
terror around Paris, killing the two al-Qaida-linked brothers who staged a
murderous rampage at a satirical newspaper and an accomplice who seized
hostages at a kosher supermarket to try to help the brothers escape.
The worst
terrorist violence France has seen in decades killed at least 20 people,
including the three gunmen. A fourth suspect — the common law wife of the
market attacker — was still at large and believed to be armed.
Al-Qaida's
branch in Yemen said it directed the attack against the publication Charlie
Hebdo to avenge the honor of the Prophet Muhammad, a frequent target of the
weekly's satire.
The
brothers were not unknown to authorities: One had a terrorism-related
conviction for ties to a network sending fighters to battle American forces in
Iraq, and both were on the U.S. no-fly list, according to a U.S. official.
President Francois Hollande
urged his nation to remain united and vigilant, and the city shut down a famed
Jewish neighborhood amid fears of more violence.
"The threats facing France are not finished," Hollande said.
"We are a free people who cave to no pressure."
The drama, which played out on live TV and social media, began with the
brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi methodically massacring 12 people Wednesday at
the Charlie Hebdo offices, stopping to shoot a wounded police officer in the
head before escaping by car.
On
Thursday, a gunman police identified as Amedy Coulibaly shot a policewoman to
death south of Paris, although authorities were not sure at first if it was
related to the Charlie Hebdo shootings
It all ended at dusk Friday
with near-simultaneous raids in two locations: a printing plant in the town of
Dammartin-en-Goele, northeast of Paris, where the Kouachis were holed up, and
the Paris supermarket where Coulibaly killed four hostages and threatened more
violence unless the police let the Kouachis go.
As scores of black-clad security forces surrounded both sites, booming
explosions, heavy gunfire and dense smoke heralded the news that the twin
sieges finally had ended.
The three gunmen were dead — but the authorities also discovered four
dead hostages at the market. Sixteen hostages were freed, one from the printing
plant and 15 others from the store.
The attackers had ties both to each other and to terrorist activities
that reached back years and extended from Paris to al-Qaida in Yemen. They
epitomized Western authorities' greatest fear: Islamic radicals who trained
abroad and came home to stage attacks.
After the killings at the Charlie Hebdo offices, Cherif Kouachi, 32, and
his 34-year-old brother Said led police on a chase around northeastern France,
robbing a gas station and stealing a car before ending up at the printing plant
in Dammartin-en-Goele, near Charles de Gaulle airport. One of the brothers was
wounded in the neck at one point during a shootout with police after he
commandeered a car, Paris Prosecutor Francois Molins said.
Authorities said the brothers temporarily took a man hostage at the
plant but let him go, and a second man was later discovered to have been hiding
inside the building.
A member of the al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula gave a statement in
English to The Associated Press saying the group's leadership "directed
the operations and they have chosen their target carefully."
The attack was in line with
warnings from the late al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden to the West about
"the consequences of the persistence in the blasphemy against Muslim sanctities,"
the member said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the group's
regulations do not permit him to give his name.
The brothers were cornered there for much of the day before the
explosions and gunfire rang out in the twilight and a police SWAT team
clambered onto the roof.
"They said they want to die as martyrs," Yves Albarello, a
local lawmaker inside the command post, told French television station i-Tele.
At the kosher grocery near the Porte de Vincennes neighborhood of the
capital, the gunman burst in shooting just a few hours before the Jewish
Sabbath began, declaring "You know who I am," the official recounted.
The attack came before sundown when the store would have been crowded
with shoppers, and Hollande called it "a terrifying anti-Semitic
act."
Coulibaly killed the four people in the market shortly after entering,
Molins said.
Several people wounded in the grocery store were able to flee and get
medical care, the official said.
About 100 students were
locked down in nearby schools and the highway ringing Paris was closed.
The mayor's office also shut down all shops along Rosiers Street in the
city's famed Marais neighborhood in the heart of the tourist district. Hours
before the Jewish Sabbath, the street is usually crowded with shoppers. The
street is also only a kilometer (half-mile) from Charlie Hebdo's offices.
Charles de Gaulle airport, not far from the standoff in
Dammartin-en-Goele, briefly closed two runways to arrivals, and Hollande held a
series of crisis meetings with his security team throughout the day.
Police released a photo of Coulibaly and his wife, Hayat Boumeddiene,
described as an accomplice.
Authorities increasingly grew to see links between the attackers after
they discovered that Boumeddiene and the companion of one of the Kouachi
brothers had exchanged about 500 phone calls, Molins said.
He added that several people have been given preliminary charges in the
investigation. They include relatives of the three gunmen.
Minutes before police stormed both sites, Coulibaly had threatened more
violence if authorities launched an assault on the two brothers, a police
official said. A group of people holed up in the supermarket's freezer —
apparently unbeknownst to the gunman.
BFM also said it spoke with
Coulibaly, who said he and the Kouachis were coordinating their actions, and
that he was with the militant Islamic State group. The organizations are
normally rivals.
The TV station said Coulibaly didn't hang up properly after the phone
call and that this allowed police to hear him saying a final prayer before his
death, perhaps suggesting that this prompted the police raid.
In the final assault, phalanxes of security forces converged on the
store entrance behind a flash from a stun grenade — and fired inside. Frenzied
civilians — one of them carrying a toddler — scurried out under escort by
helmeted police in body armor.
Police said Coulibaly had been a co-suspect with Cherif Kouachi in a
court case involving terrorism that never made it to trial.
Cherif Kouachi was convicted of terrorism charges in 2008 for ties to a
network sending jihadis to fight U.S. forces in Iraq.
According to a Yemeni security official, Said Kouachi is suspected of
having fought for al-Qaida in Yemen. Another senior security official added
that Said was in Yemen until 2012.
Both officials spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because of an
ongoing investigation into Kouachi's stay in Yemen.
Both brothers were also on
the U.S. no-fly list, a senior U.S. counterterrorism official said, speaking on
condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to discuss
foreign intelligence publicly.
The attacks in France as well as a hostage siege last month in Sydney
and the October killing of a solder near Canada's parliament prompted the U.S.
State Department to issue a global travel warning for Americans. It also cites
an increased risk of reprisals against U.S. and Western targets for the
U.S.-led intervention against Islamic State militants in Syria and Iraq.
Authorities around Europe have warned of the threat posed by the return
of Western jihadis trained in warfare. France counts at least 1,200 citizens in
the war zone in Syria — headed there, returned or dead. Both the Islamic State
group and al-Qaida have threatened France, home to Western Europe's largest
Muslim population.
The publication Charlie Hebdo had long drawn threats for its depictions
of Islam, although it also lampooned other religions and political figures. It
had caricatured the Prophet Muhammad, and a sketch of Islamic State's leader
was the last tweet sent by the irreverent newspaper minutes before the attack.
Eight journalists, two police officers, a maintenance worker and a
visitor were killed in the newspaper attack, including the paper's editor.
Charlie Hebdo plans a special edition next week, produced in the offices of
another paper.
No comments:
Post a Comment