The front page of French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo is seen at a newspapers kiosk in Paris on the opening day of the trial of the January 2015 Paris attacks against Charlie Hebdo satirical weekly, a policewoman in Montrouge and the Hyper Cacher kosher supermarket, at Paris courthouse, France, September 2, 2020. The trial will take place from September 2 to November 10. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann
A man arrested in Paris after two people were wounded with a meat cleaver, says he was targeting weekly satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in the attack, a police source said.
The two people were attacked on Friday in front of the former offices of Charlie Hebdo, where militants shot dead 12 people in 2015 because the magazine had published cartoons depicting Prophet Mohammad.
Friday’s violence coincided with the start, this month, of the trial of 14 alleged accomplices in the 2015 attack, in which the gunmen killed 12 people.
On the eve of the trial, Charlie Hebdo had republished the cartoons.
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The police source said the suspected assailant, who Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said was from Pakistan and arrived in France three years ago as an unaccompanied minor, was cooperating with the Police.
A judicial source said the suspect’s custody had been extended on Saturday morning. Under French law, he faces a formal investigation at the end of the process. A suspected accomplice was released on Saturday but three others were arrested, including the suspected assailant’s brother.
By Saturday evening, nine people were in custody including the suspected attacker.
A second suspect was also detained moments after the attack and prosecutors were trying to establish his relation to the attacker. He was released without being charged, the source said.
Charlie Hebdo moved to a secret location after the 2015 attack. Its former offices are now used by a television production company.
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Two of the production company’s staff, a man and a woman, were in the street having a cigarette break when they were attacked, according to prosecutors and a colleague of the victims.
Al Qaeda, the militant group that said it was responsible for the 2015 attack, threatened to attack Charlie Hebdo again after it republished the cartoons of the Prophet. France has experienced a wave of attacks by militants including bombings and shootings in November 2015 at the Bataclan theatre and sites around Paris that killed 130 people.
In July 2016, a militant drove a truck through a crowd celebrating Bastille Day in Nice, killing 86.
NAN