The story appears on

Page A12

December 10, 2015

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » World

Father shocked as French police identify third Bataclan gunman

FRENCH police have identified the third gunman from the deadly attack on the Bataclan concert hall in Paris, Prime Minister Manuel Valls said yesterday, with the attacker's father saying he “would have killed him” if he had known.

“The last time I saw him was two years ago before he went (to Syria),” said Mohamed-Aggad. “I have no words, I only found out this morning. I have to pull myself together.”

He said that if he had known “I would have killed him myself beforehand”.

French national Foued Mohamed-Aggad, 23, had travelled to war-torn Syria with his brother, Karim, and a group of friends from the eastern French city of Strasbourg at the end of 2013, police sources said.

The family tipped off police after the Paris attacks when his mother received a text message from Syria saying he had died as “a martyr”, iTele reported.

“He died on the November 13 with his brothers,” the text message read, according to the mother's lawyer, Francoise Cotta.

“She was terror-struck by the idea that he could have been one of suicide attackers at the Bataclan,” Cotta added, and went straight to the police.

“If she had not helped like that they might never have been able to identify Foued,” the lawyer said.

The two other attackers who killed 90 concert-goers at the Bataclan — Omar Ismail Mostefai, 29, and former Paris bus driver Samy Amimour, 28 — had also been to Syria.

Two of the gunmen, including Mohamed-Aggad, blew themselves up with suicide belts packed with explosives after the killing spree, while the third was shot by police who stormed the venue with hundreds of people still inside.

All three are now known to have been French nationals.

Mohamed-Aggad was identified at the end of last week after his DNA was matched with his family, the police source said. Cotta said his mother offered the sample herself.

A neighbor in the small town of Wissembourg, north of Strasbourg, said that Mohamed-Aggad had lived with his mother until his departure for Syria.

He had also been on the radar of security services as a potential extremist, a judicial source said, and had probably travelled to Syria on false papers.

Most of the group from Strasbourg who went to Syria with him were arrested in the Meinau area of the city on their return in May 2014 and are all still in custody on terrorist charges.

But Mohamed-Aggad stayed on, according to another source.

Investigators believe two brothers from the same group who left Strasbourg in 2013, Mourad and Yassine Boudjellal, were killed fighting for the Islamic State extremist group in Syria.

A huge manhunt is still going on for Belgian Salah Abdeslam, whose brother Brahim blew himself up at the Comptoir Voltaire cafe.

Nearly 1,500 people were watching the Californian band Eagles of Death Metal play at the Bataclan venue when the gunmen opened fire leaving 90 dead and hundreds hurt. A further 40 people were killed in a string of coordinated attacks in and around Paris the same evening.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend