FRANCE

Islamist terror suspected in murder of policewoman near Paris

French Prime Minister Jean Castex speaking to police officers at the crime scene. Photo: Twitter/@JeanCASTEX
The perpetrator is said to be a 36-year-old man from Tunisia, who shouted "Allahu akbar" (God is greatest).
French anti-terrorism authorities are investigating the killing of a policewoman at a police station outside Paris on Friday.

Investigators assume it was an act of terrorism. "In the fight against Islamist terrorism, we will not back down," President Emmanuel Macron said.

The suspected attacker was reportedly shot by police and died of his wounds after attacking the officer's throat from behind with a knife in Rambouillet, about 60 kilometres from the French capital.

The police officer died at the scene.

Prime Minister Jean Castex, who visited the scene of the crime, said that France had lost an "everyday hero in a barbaric and entirely cowardly act."

The sequence of events and the perpetrator's statements were reasons why anti-terrorism investigators had taken over, prosecutor Jean-Francois Ricard said at the scene.

The woman had been murdered "in a cowardly fashion," he said, without giving any details.

The perpetrator is said to be a man from Tunisia, who was not previously known to the authorities. He is said to have shouted "Allahu akbar" (God is greatest) and to have been about 36 years old. The prosecutor did not comment on this either.

Macron wrote on Twitter that the police officer was called Stephanie. He said the country stood by her family, her colleagues and the police.

Mother of two children

Media reported that the woman was surprised by the attacker when she entered the police station. The attack allegedly took place in the entrance area, where the mother of two children had just returned from her break.

According to the reports, she was about 49 years old and had worked in the police station for years.

Jerome Moisant of the police union Unite SGP Police told Franceinfo that the killed colleague had worked in administration. The attacker had earlier been conspicuous outside the police station.

BFM TV reported that the attacker had been watching a jihadist video on his phone before the attack.

Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin instructed prefects in the country to strengthen security around police stations. They are to increase vigilance and security measures in particular at the entrance areas.

For years, France has been rocked by Islamist attacks, killing more than 250 people.

In October, the teacher Samuel Paty was beheaded not far from Friday's killing by an Islamist. A short time later, an attacker struck at a church in Nice, killing three people there with a knife.