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French jihadist attacks church while under house arrest

Last Updated 27 July 2016, 03:21 IST

 A French jihadist who was under house arrest on terror charges took part in a church attack in which a priest was killed, further inflaming tensions over security failures in the violence-weary nation.

Adel Kermiche, 19, was one of two attackers who stormed a Catholic church in the northern town of Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray during morning mass yesterday, slitting the throat of an 86-year-old priest and leaving a worshipper with serious injuries, said Paris prosecutor Francois Molins.

The attack, claimed by the Islamic State group, comes with France still in mourning less than two weeks after Tunisian Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel ploughed a truck into a crowd in the Riviera city of Nice, killing 84 people and injuring over 300.

The carnage, the third major strike on France in 18 months, prompted a bitter political spat over alleged security failings and revelations over the church attack were likely to raise further questions.

Molins said that Kermiche first came to the attention of anti-terror officials when a member of his family alerted him as missing in March 2015. He was arrested by German officials and found to be using his brother's identity in a bid to reach Syria.

He was charged and released under judicial supervision, but in May fled to Turkey where he was again arrested and returned to France where he was held in custody until March 2016.

Kermiche was released and fitted with an electronic bracelet which allowed him to leave his house on weekdays between 8:00 AM and 12:30 AM, said Molins.

It was during this time, that he and another attacker entered the centuries-old stone Saint-Etienne church, taking hostage the 86-year-old priest, three nuns and two worshippers.

One of the nuns managed to escape and call police, who, upon arrival, tried to negotiate with the hostage-takers through a small door.

The nun, Sister Danielle, told local radio RMC that slain priest Jaques Hamel was wearing his white cloak and was at the foot of the altar when "they forced him to get on his knees and not move".

"He tried to struggle, he tried," she said, adding the men were speaking Arabic and shouting and had "recorded" the attack.

Molins said police were unable to launch an assault on the church as three hostages were lined up in front of the door.

Two nuns and one worshipper then exited the church followed by the two attackers, one carrying a handgun, who charged police shouting "Allahu akbar" (God is greatest).

One of the attackers was carrying a "fake explosive device covered in aluminium foil" and three knives, and the other was holding in his hand a kitchen timer covered in foil, and carrying a backpack containing a similar fake bomb.

"The two were neutralised" and killed by police, said Molins.

The prosecutor said that a 17-year-old born in Algeria had been taken into custody. He is the younger brother of a suspect "wanted under an international arrest warrant for having left to the Iraq-Syria zone".

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(Published 27 July 2016, 03:21 IST)

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