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Police swarm forest in hunt for Paris massacre suspects

French armed police have converged on a forest northeast of Paris in the hunt for two men wanted ...
Newstalk
Newstalk

16.29 8 Jan 2015


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Police swarm forest in hunt fo...

Police swarm forest in hunt for Paris massacre suspects

Newstalk
Newstalk

16.29 8 Jan 2015


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French armed police have converged on a forest northeast of Paris in the hunt for two men wanted in connection with yesterday's massacre in Paris, in which 12 people were killed when gunmen attacked the offices of a satirical magazine.

Two men reportedly fitting the descriptions of brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi stole fuel and food from a petrol station near Villers-Cotterets, in the northern Aisne region, 43 miles (70km) from Paris, this morning.

Heavily-armed police have finished searching the village of Crepy-en-Valois, 10 miles (16km) from the petrol station.

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They are now focusing on a stretch of countryside spanning from Soissons, through Abbaye de Longpont, right up to Villers-Cotteret.

Sky's Joey Jones said officers were going house-to-house "scrutinising each resident".

Witness Benoit Verdun told Sky News he believes the suspects are in a very large forest near Longpont, which he said is "bigger than Paris" - measuring some 13,000 hectares, or 50 square miles.

Crepy-en-Valois' mayor Bruno Fortier said he could not confirm reports the men were holed up in a house in the area.

"It's an incessant waltz of police cars and trucks," he told Reuters.

Jones said the picture is one of "utter confusion" and there are many rumours flying around.

Earlier the men, wearing balaclavas, were spotted travelling on the N2 road in the direction of Paris in a Renault Clio which had weapons on its back seat and its number plates covered.

AFP said the pair had Kalashnikovs and what appeared to be a rocket-launcher.

RAID, the French anti-terrorist unit, and GIGN, a paramilitary special operations unit, have been deployed in the region.

But Jones said it would appear the suspects are "a step or two ahead" of authorities at the moment.

He added: "The indications at the moment suggest that they (police) are finding it difficult to get a grip on this fast-moving situation.

"Each time we arrive at an area where they have been sighted or there is some sort of suspicion of significant police activity, you get the feeling that things have moved on.

"This is such a fast moving situation, who knows where it will end up."

Officials have said the French nationals are linked to a Yemeni terror network.

Islamic State radio praised the killers as "heroes" and said they had avenged the Prophet Mohammed.

On Wednesday night heavily armoured police raided an apartment in the city of Reims in the search for the killers. Seven people were detained overnight.

Another suspect handed himself in to police after he was named on social media as 18-year-old Hamyd Mourad.

Sky News say the teenager, who has been arrested, is the brother-in-law of the suspects.

There are reports he was in school at the time of the attack and schoolmates said he was on the bus with them at 7.30am and midday on Wednesday.

Tensions remain high in the country after a female police officer was shot dead in southern Paris this morning.

A "criminal" blast was also reported at a kebab shop near a mosque in the eastern French town of Villefranche-sur-Saone. No one was injured.

Officials have not said either incident is linked to the Paris terror attack.

French investigators found a dozen Molotov cocktails and two jihadist flags in the black Citroen getaway car abandoned shortly after Wednesday's massacre.

Tributes to the victims have been left near Charlie Hebdo's offices and a minute's silence was held in the French capital.

Meanwhile, one of the first people who arrived at the bloodbath gave an emotional account of what happened.

Patrick Pelloux, a columnist who is also trained as a doctor, said: "It was horrible. Many were already gone because they were shot down execution-style.

"We managed to save the others who this morning are doing well."

Next week's issue will be published despite the murders, he said, meaning his colleagues "have not died in vain".

Copies of the latest issue of the €3 weekly have been drawing bids of more than €70,000 on internet auction sites.


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