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2 Wounded in Paris Knife Attack Near Charlie Hebdo’s Former Office 2 Wounded in Paris Knife Attack Near Charlie Hebdo’s Former Office
(about 2 hours later)
PARIS — Two people were wounded by a knife-wielding assailant in Paris on Friday near the site of the former Charlie Hebdo office — the scene of a 2015 terrorist attack targeting the satirical newspaper the authorities said. PARIS — Two people were wounded by a knife-wielding assailant in eastern Paris on Friday near the site of the former Charlie Hebdo office — the scene of a 2015 terrorist attack targeting the satirical newspaper that is the focus of an ongoing trial.
“An attack with a bladed weapon was carried out in the 11th arrondissement in front of the former offices of Charlie Hebdo,” Jean Castex, the prime minister, said as he cut short a scheduled speech. A primary suspect was arrested a short time later, the authorities said.
A suspect was arrested a short time later in the Bastille neighborhood, an area in Paris not far from the site of the attack, according to the police. The person was not immediately identified and it was unclear how he or she was linked to the attack. French prosecutors said that they had opened a terrorism investigation. Jean-François Ricard, France’s top antiterrorism prosecutor, told reporters at the site of the attack that the police had taken a second person into custody to verify “their connections to the main perpetrator.”
The authorities initially gave a higher number for people injured, revising it later on Friday. Mr. Ricard said prosecutors were opening a terrorism investigation because of the location of the attack in front of the building where Charlie Hebdo had its offices at the time of the terrorist attack in January 2015 that left 12 people dead and because of its timing. A trial is ongoing for several people accused of aiding the assailants in the 2015 attack.
Emmanuel Grégoire, the deputy mayor of Paris, in a post on Twitter urged people to avoid the Richard-Lenoir neighborhood where Charlie Hebdo had its offices before the terrorist attack in January 2015 that left 12 people dead. Prime Minister Jean Castex, who cut short a scheduled speech when the attack took place, told reporters that the attack had occurred “in a symbolic location,” not far from a mural that pays tribute to the victims of the 2015 attack.
The attack took place next to a mural that pays tribute to the victims of the 2015 Charlie Hebdo attacks. The assailant, who was not immediately identified, attacked “two people he knew nothing about and who were just taking a cigarette break,” Mr. Ricard said. Their lives were not in danger, Mr. Castex said.
The two victims were employees of Premières Lignes, a documentary production company that used to be neighbors with Charlie Hebdo. Some of its employees were the first witnesses to the January 2015 attack. The two victims were employees of Premières Lignes, a documentary production company that is next door to the former Charlie Hebdo office. Some of its employees were the first witnesses to the January 2015 attack.
Paul Moreira, a journalist and filmmaker at Premières Lignes, told the BFM TV news channel that the two employees were on the street in front of the building shortly before noon on Friday when an assailant attacked them with a “kind of meat cleaver.” Luc Hermann, a journalist at Premières Lignes, told the BFM TV news channel that the two employees, a man and a woman, appeared to have been attacked “totally by chance.”
“It’s chilling,” Mr. Moreira said. Mr. Hermann said that it was “a surprise attack, by a man armed with a very large bladed weapon,” who inflicted “extremely violent blows.” He blamed the authorities for failing to secure the area surrounding Charlie Hebdo’s former offices.
One witness, identified only as Fabien, told BFM TV that he was working in his office when, shortly before noon, he heard screaming in the street and leaned out of the window. He also noted that there had been “absolutely no security” on the street since the start of the trial, which he said was a major problem.
“I saw a young woman with a huge head wound, blood was running all over her face,” he said, adding that he did not see any assailants. A few hours after the attack on Friday, the satirical weekly wrote on Twitter that its “entire team offers its support and solidarity to his former neighbors and colleagues” at Premières Lignes, “and to the people affected by this heinous attack.”
Minutes after the attacks, dozens of politicians from across the political spectrum posted messages on Twitter in support of the victims, some with the hashtag #JeSuisCharlie or #IAmCharlie, a popular refrain in the wake of the 2015 attack, although no connection between the two attacks has yet been officially established. The main suspect was arrested in the Bastille neighborhood, an area in Paris not far from the site of the attack, according to the police. The authorities initially gave a higher number of people injured, revising it later on Friday.
François Vauglin, the mayor of the 11th arrondissement, told BFM TV that he had asked schools and day care centers in the area to go on lockdown as a precautionary measure. Minutes after the attack, dozens of politicians from across the political spectrum posted messages on Twitter in support of the victims, some with the hashtag #JeSuisCharlie or #IAmCharlie, a popular refrain in the wake of the 2015 attack, although no connection between the two attacks has been officially established yet.
Schools and day care centers in the area went on lockdown as a precautionary measure before reopening later on Friday.
While in recent years many attacks in France have targeted law enforcement officers, including in 2017 when a veteran police officer was shot and killed on the Champs-Élysées, assailants have also orchestrated indiscriminate attacks.While in recent years many attacks in France have targeted law enforcement officers, including in 2017 when a veteran police officer was shot and killed on the Champs-Élysées, assailants have also orchestrated indiscriminate attacks.
In March, 2018, a gunman killed four people in a supermarket in southern France, including a police officer, and two months later an attacker stabbed five people near the Paris Opera, one fatally. In October 2019, a veteran police employee killed four of his colleagues in a knife attack at the headquarters of the Paris police, in what the authorities later called a terrorist attack.In March, 2018, a gunman killed four people in a supermarket in southern France, including a police officer, and two months later an attacker stabbed five people near the Paris Opera, one fatally. In October 2019, a veteran police employee killed four of his colleagues in a knife attack at the headquarters of the Paris police, in what the authorities later called a terrorist attack.
Al Qaeda, the terrorist group, had recently issued new threats against Charlie Hebdo, which moved after the 2015 attack to highly secured offices elsewhere. The threats followed the newspaper’s decision to reprint satirical cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad at the opening of the trial of several people accused of aiding the assailants.Al Qaeda, the terrorist group, had recently issued new threats against Charlie Hebdo, which moved after the 2015 attack to highly secured offices elsewhere. The threats followed the newspaper’s decision to reprint satirical cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad at the opening of the trial of several people accused of aiding the assailants.
In the 2015 attack, two brothers, Chérif and Saïd Kouachi, stormed into the building that housed the satirical newspaper and fatally shot a maintenance worker. The brothers then forced at gunpoint a cartoonist, who had just stepped outside, to enter a security code to access the offices. Marika Bret, Charlies Hebdo’s head of human resources, said this week that she had been forced to leave her home 12 days ago after her security guards received detailed and precise threats against her.
Speaking to the weekly Le Point, Ms. Bret, who has been living under police protection since 2015, said that the threats reflected “the unprecedented level of tension we are facing.”
In the 2015 attack, two brothers, Chérif and Saïd Kouachi, stormed into the building that housed the satirical newspaper and fatally shot a maintenance worker. The brothers then forced at gunpoint a cartoonist who had just stepped outside to enter a security code to access the offices.
The gunmen entered as journalists were holding a weekly news meeting and opened fire with semiautomatic rifles, killing 10 people and critically injuring four others. They left the building less than two minutes later and shot and killed a police officer who tried to stop them as they fled. After a two-day manhunt, the Kouachi brothers were killed in a shootout with the police in a small town north of Paris.The gunmen entered as journalists were holding a weekly news meeting and opened fire with semiautomatic rifles, killing 10 people and critically injuring four others. They left the building less than two minutes later and shot and killed a police officer who tried to stop them as they fled. After a two-day manhunt, the Kouachi brothers were killed in a shootout with the police in a small town north of Paris.
Constant Méheut contributed reporting from Paris and Elian Peltier from London. “Since the start of the trial and with the republication of the cartoons, we have received all kinds of horrors, including threats from Al Qaeda and calls to finish the work of the Kouachi brothers,” Ms. Bret said.
Elian Peltier contributed reporting from London.