The Islamic State group claimed
responsibility Saturday for an attack in which a Tunisian drove a truck
through a crowd in Nice, killing 84, prompting hard questions in France
over security failures.
In a statement via its Amaq news service
IS said one of its “soldiers” carried out the attack on Thursday night
“in response to calls to target nations of coalition states that are
fighting (IS)”.
Tunisian Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel, 31,
smashed a 19-tonne truck into crowd of people in the Riviera city who
were celebrating Bastille Day — France’s national day. Police said he
had no known connection to jihadist groups.
French President Francois Hollande met
with his defence and security chiefs and cabinet ministers as criticism
from the opposition and media mounted over security failings after the
third major attack in France in 18 months.
“If we are at war, as the government
tells us, then the currency of war is intelligence, learning from
experience, analysing failures and victories,” wrote Yann Marec in an
editorial for the southern region’s Midi Libre newspaper.
He was one of several calling for
action, and not merely “the same old solemn declarations” from the
government, as Le Figaro daily said.
Some 30,000 people had thronged the palm
tree-lined Promenade des Anglais on Thursday night to watch a fireworks
display with their friends and families, but the night turned to horror
as the truck left mangled bodies strewn in its wake.
– ‘Flaws and shortcomings’ –
Hollande said the country would observe
three days of mourning as he warned the death toll could rise further,
with more than 50 people still fighting for their lives.
Four more people linked to Lahouaiej-Bouhlel have been arrested. The driver’s estranged wife is also being held by police.
IS also claimed responsibility for
November 13 attacks in which 130 people were killed in Paris, while
gunmen in January 2015 attacks on the Charlie Hebdo weekly and a Jewish
supermarket were linked to both IS and Al-Qaeda.
The massacre has once again shaken the
country to its core, and prompted questions about the effectiveness of
security measures with the country already under an eight month-long
state of emergency.
France, which has a Muslim population of
nearly five million, is also the origin of hundreds of jihadists who
have flocked to fight alongside IS.
Presidential contender and former prime
minister Alain Juppe said Friday that the latest carnage could have been
prevented if “all measures” had been taken.
But government spokesman Stephane Le
Foll slammed Juppe’s comments, saying there was as much security present
for the fireworks display as there had been for the Euro 2016 football
tournament in the city.
He said there were more than 185 police,
gendarmes and soldiers on the ground, as well as municipal police and a
vast network of surveillance cameras.
“Despite all of that, this man’s decisions… created the drama and horror we experienced.”
A French parliamentary inquiry last week criticised numerous failings by the intelligence services over the Paris attacks.
“We know of course that there are still flaws and shortcomings,” said Hollande.
“Government intervention is imperative in that area in order to better coordinate our intelligence services,” he added.
– A depressed loner –
Authorities will also face questions
over how Lahouaiej-Bouhlel slipped through the cracks, as initial
investigations showed he had a record of petty crime and domestic
violence, but no known connection to terrorist groups.
Anti-terrorism prosecutor Francois
Molins said the attack was “exactly in line with” calls from jihadist
groups for supporters to kill in their home countries.
For several years, extremist groups such
as IS and Al-Qaeda have exhorted followers to strike “infidels” —
singling out France on several occasions — using whatever means they
have to hand.
In September 2014, IS spokesman Abu Mohammed al-Adnani, suggested supporters “run (infidels) over with your car”.
While some attacks on the West — such as
the November assault on Paris and the March bombings in Brussels — were
carried out by jihadists who have been to the centre of IS operations
in Iraq and Syria, others have been led by so-called “lone-wolf”
attackers.
Inspired from afar by Islamist propaganda, such attackers are a massive headache for intelligence services.
Lahouaiej-Bouhlel’s father said he had suffered from depression and had “no links” to religion.
“From 2002 to 2004, he had problems that
caused a nervous breakdown. He would become angry and he shouted… he
would break anything he saw in front of him,” Mohamed Mondher
Lahouaiej-Bouhlel said in Tunisia.
Neighbours described the attacker, who worked as a delivery man, as a loner who never responded to their greetings.
He and his wife had three children, but she had demanded a divorce after a “violent argument”, one neighbour said.
In Nice, the seaside streets that would
normally be bustling on a summer weekend were near-deserted, with teary
residents making their way to the promenade to lay down flowers in
memory of the dead.
At least 10 children and teenagers were
among the dead as well as tourists from the United States, Russia,
Ukraine, Switzerland and Germany.
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