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Louvre Museum Evacuated After French Soldier Opens Fire Louvre Museum Evacuated After French Soldier Opens Fire
(35 minutes later)
PARIS — A man with a large knife was shot by a French soldier on Friday after he lunged at police officers and soldiers, shouting “God is great” near the Louvre Museum in Paris, the police said, immediately raising tensions in a country that has been the site of several terrorist attacks in the past 18 months. PARIS — A man with a large knife was shot by a French soldier on Friday after he lunged at police officers and soldiers, shouting “God is great” in Arabic near the Louvre Museum in Paris, the police said, immediately raising tensions in a country that has been the site of several terrorist attacks in the past two years.
The Paris police chief, Michel Cadot, said that the assailant had been carrying two backpacks but that there was no indication they had contained explosives.The Paris police chief, Michel Cadot, said that the assailant had been carrying two backpacks but that there was no indication they had contained explosives.
Mr. Cadot said the suspect was seriously wounded after being shot five times, and that one soldier had suffered a minor scalp injury. The Paris prosecutor’s office opened an investigation, but the authorities are being cautious about the suspect’s motives. even as they treat it as a possible terrorism case.
The courtyard of the Louvre was cordoned off, and a soldier standing guard said the museum had been evacuated. Mr. Cadot said the suspect was seriously wounded after being shot five times in the stairway that leads from the underground Carrousel du Louvre shopping center to an entrance of the museum, and that one soldier had a minor scalp injury.
There was no immediate mention of terrorism, but the Louvre has long been considered one of the Paris tourist sites that could be a target of extremists, and the museum is heavily guarded. The authorities cordoned off a courtyard of the Louvre, which has long been considered a possible target of extremists, and the museum is heavily guarded.
Paris has been hit by several terrorist attacks over the last two years, the most deadly on Nov. 13, 2015, when 130 people were killed in and around the city. There were about 250 visitors in the museum at the time of the attack, in the morning, when the venue is less crowded. It also draws far fewer visitors in the winter, which is low season for tourists.
Those who were inside the museum were moved to a secure place, the police chief said, and no one else was allowed to enter.
France has been under a state of emergency for more than a year, since attacks in and around the city in November 2015 left 130 people dead. It has been the site of several assaults since then.
In June, an off-duty police officer and his wife were stabbed to death by a man who then filmed himself claiming allegiance to the Islamic State and broadcast the video on Facebook.
On July 14, a man driving a truck plowed into a crowd celebrating Bastille Day in the southern city of Nice, killing 86 people. Just 12 days later, two men burst into a church during morning mass in the northern town of St.-Étienne-du-Rouvray and slaughtered a priest, Jacques Hamel.
Many of the assailants have said they were inspired by the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, but have had links to a wider network of terrorists.
Over the summer, most notably during the Euro 2016 soccer championship, France heightened its security, and made several raids on possible terrorist cells.
Some of the suspects were French citizens, some showed no sign of radicalization, and women have emerged among their ranks.
In November, seven men who the authorities said were planning terrorist attacks were arrested in the eastern city of Strasbourg and the southern port city of Marseille.
With presidential elections scheduled in a few months, and more than two years after the attacks on the Paris offices of the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, questions of how to deal with terrorism and security remain a source of tension in France.