Paris shooting: ISIS claims responsibility, attacker is reportedly a known terror suspect

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French authorities say the dead suspect of Thursday's Islamic State-claimed shooting has been identified, while the Champs-Élysées remains on lockdown.
Police officers block the access to the Champs Elysees in Paris after a shooting on April 20, 2017. PHOTO: AFP
Masked police stand on top of their vehicle on the Champs Elysees. PHOTO: REUTERS
Police officers block the access to the Champs Elysees in Paris after a shooting on April 20, 2017. PHOTO: AFP
Police officers block the access to the Champs Elysees in Paris after a shooting on April 20, 2017. PHOTO: AFP
People raise their arms to show their hands as they walk towards police on a side road near the Champs Elysees. PHOTO: REUTERS
French police officers on duty after the shooting on April 20, 2017. PHOTO: EPA
French police officers search the area after the shooting in which at least one officer died. PHOTO: EPA
Emergency vehicles respond to the incident in Paris.

PARIS (AFP) - A known terror suspect gunned down a police officer and wounded two others on Thursday (April 20) on Paris's Champs Elysees in an attack claimed by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) just days before France's presidential election.

The shooter opened fire with an automatic weapon on a police car on the world-famous boulevard at around 9.00 pm (3.00 am Friday, Singapore time), prompting tourists and visitors to run for their lives.

After killing the officer and injuring his colleagues, the gunman was shot dead in return fire while trying to flee on foot, police sources told AFP.

"The perpetrator of the attack in Champs Elysees in central Paris is Abu Yussef the Belgian and he is one of the Islamic State's fighters," said an ISIS statement published by its propaganda agency Amaq.

The attacker was known to French anti-terror police, sources told AFP, and raids took place at his address in a suburb to the east of Paris.

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One policeman was killed and two others wounded in Paris on Thursday night. The shooting, in which the assailant was also killed, took place on the Champs-Elysees shopping boulevard just days ahead of France's presidential election.

Observers had long feared an attack ahead of Sunday's election in France, following a string of atrocities by extremists since 2015 that have claimed over 230 lives.

The impact on the outcome of one of the most unpredictable contests in decades is unclear, but far-right leader Marine Le Pen and scandal-hit conservative Francois Fillon immediately cancelled their campaign events on Friday.

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An eyewitness who saw an attacker open fire on police on the Champs-Elysees says he hid from the incident in a nearby shop.
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Up until now, polls showed voters more concerned about unemployment and their spending power than terrorism or security, though analysts warned this would change in the event of further bloodshed.

The shooting came two days after the arrest of two men in southern Marseille with weapons and explosives, who were suspected of preparing an attack to disrupt the election campaign which concludes on Sunday.

French President Francois Hollande, again forced to address the nation after an attack, promised "absolute vigilance, particularly with regard to the electoral process" and paid tribute to the police.

SECURITY CAMPAIGN

Le Pen earlier welcomed security moving to the heart of the campaign on Thursday as she took part in a prime-time interview show alongside 10 other presidential candidates.

"We are suffering the consequences of a laxity that has continued for years," she said shortly before the shooting, promising to take a hard line against extremists and anyone suspected of being an Islamist.

For weeks, centrist former banker Emmanuel Macron and Le Pen have been out in front but opinion polls now show there is a chance that any of four leading candidates could reach the second-round runoff on May 7.

Though Le Pen and Macron are the frontrunners, conservative candidate Fillon and far-left firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon have closed the gap substantially in the last two weeks.

"The first responsibility of the president is to protect," Macron said on the interview show. "This threat will be part of our daily lives in the next years."

As the first details filtered through, US President Donald Trump sent his condolences and said that "it looks like another terrorist attack. What can you say? It just never ends." .

STATE OF EMERGENCY

The bustling shopping street in the heart of the city was immediately blocked by armed officers after the attack and nearby metro stations were closed.

"We had to hide our customers in the basement," Choukri Chouanine, manager of a restaurant near the site of the shooting, told AFP, saying there was "a lot of gunfire."

A spokesman for the interior ministry Pierre-Henry Brandet paid tribute to the fast reflexes of police at the scene who managed to kill the gunman and prevent further bloodshed on a busy spring-time evening.

A tourist was slightly wounded in her knee by shrapnel during the shooting, said a police source, who did not provide the woman's nationality.

"We face a particularly high risk of terrorism," Brandet told reporters.

France is in a state of emergency and at its highest possible level of alert since the attacks that began in 2015. The Charlie Hebdo magazine was hit in January 2015, sites around Paris including the Bataclan concert hall were targeted in November the same year and families at a fireworks display in Nice in July last year.

In between, there have been a series of smaller attacks, often aimed at security forces.

Thousands of troops and armed police have been deployed to guard tourist hotspots such as the Champs Elysees or other potential targets including government buildings and religious sites.

In February, a man armed with a machete in each hand attacked soldiers on patrol at Paris's Louvre Museum. The attacker, a 29-year-old Egyptian, was seriously injured. And in March, a 39-year-old man was killed at Paris's Orly airport after attacking a soldier.

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