Officers shot and
killed a knife-wielding man with wires protruding from his clothes at a
police station in northern Paris on Thursday, French officials said, a
year to the day after an attack on the French satirical newspaper
Charlie Hebdo launched a bloody year in the French capital.
Luc Poignant, a police union official, said the man cried out "Allahu akbar," Arabic for "God is great."
Just
a few minutes earlier, elsewhere in the city, French President Francois
Hollande had finished paying homage to police officers killed in the
line of duty, including three shot to death in the attacks last January.
A
Paris police official said police were investigating the incident at
the Paris police station Thursday as "more likely terrorism" than a
standard criminal act. The official spoke on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorized to be publicly named according to police
policy.
The neighborhood in the Goutte d'Or district of northern Paris was locked down after the shooting.
Hollande had said earlier that what he called a "terrorist threat" would continue to weigh on France.
On
Jan. 7, 2015, two French-born brothers killed 11 people inside the
building where Charlie Hebdo operated, as well as a Muslim policeman
outside. Over the next two days, an accomplice shot a policewoman to
death and then stormed a kosher supermarket, killing four hostages.
All
three gunmen died.
In a speech to police
forces charged with protecting the country against new attacks, Hollande
said the government was passing new laws and ramping up security, but
the threat remained high.
Hollande especially
called for better surveillance of "radicalized" citizens who have joined
Islamic State or other militant groups in Syria and Iraq when they
return to France.
"We must be able to force
these people -and only these people- to fulfill certain obligations and
if necessary to put them under house arrest ... because they are
dangerous," he said.
Three police officers
were among the 17 dead in the attacks last January, which ended after
two days of bloodshed in the Paris region.
Hollande said officers die in the line of duty "so that we can live free."
Following
the January attacks, the government announced it planned to give police
better equipment and hire more intelligence agents.
France
has been on high alert ever since, and was struck again Nov. 13 by
extremists in attacks claimed by the Islamic State group that killed 130
people at a concert hall and in bars and restaurants.
Survivors of the January attacks, meanwhile, are continuing to speak out.
Cartoonist
Laurent Sourisseau, the editor-in-chief of Charlie Hebdo, who is known
as Riss, told France Inter radio "security is a new expense for the
newspaper budget."
"This past year we've had
to invest nearly 2 million euros to secure our office, which is an
enormous sum," he said. "We have to spend hundreds of thousands on
surveillance of our offices, which wasn't previously in Charlie's
budget, but we had an obligation so that employees feel safe and can
work safely."
After the attacks, people around
the world embraced the expression "Je suis Charlie" to express
solidarity with the slain journalists, targeted for the paper's
caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad.
"It's a
phrase that was used during the march as a sign of emotion or resistance
to terrorism," Charlie Hebdo cartoonist Corinne Rey - known as Coco -
told France Inter radio. "And little by little, I realized that 'I am
Charlie' was misused for so many things. And now I don't really know
what it means."
AP.
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