Priest killed in hostage-taking near Rouen

Blackleaf

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A priest has been killed in an attack by two armed men at his church in a suburb of Rouen in northern France, police and French media have said.

The armed men entered the church in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray during Mass, taking the priest, Fr Jacques Hamel, 84, and four other people hostage.

Police later surrounded the church and French TV said shots were fired. Both hostage-takers are now dead.

France church attack: Priest killed in hostage-taking near Rouen


BBC News
26 July 2016


The area has been cordoned off and police have told people to stay away

A priest has been killed in an attack by two armed men at his church in a suburb of Rouen in northern France, police and French media have said.

The armed men entered the church in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray during Mass, taking the priest, Fr Jacques Hamel, 84, and four other people hostage.

Police later surrounded the church and French TV said shots were fired. Both hostage-takers are now dead.

Pope Francis decried the "pain and horror of this absurd violence".

French interior ministry spokesman, Pierre-Henri Brandet, said one of the hostages had been critically wounded.

He said the hostage-takers had been "neutralised" after coming out of the church. Police were now searching the church for explosives.

'Barbaric'

Police sources said it appeared the attackers had slit the priest's throat with a knife.

The area has been cordoned off and police have told people to stay away.

Mr Brandet said the motive of the attackers was not immediately clear, but the investigation into the incident would be led by anti-terrorism prosecutors.

One of the men was known to the French intelligence services, French TV channel M6 has reported.


French police took up positions at Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray town hall in Normandy

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls has expressed his horror at the "barbaric attack".

"The whole of France and all Catholics are wounded. We will stand together," he wrote on Twitter.

President Francois Hollande has arrived in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray to be briefed by police.

The Archbishop of Rouen, Dominique Lebrun, who was attending a Catholic gathering in Poland, said: "I cry out to God with all men of goodwill. I would invite non-believers to join in the cry.

"The Catholic Church cannot take weapons other than those of prayer and brotherhood among men."



A woman who works at a local beauty parlour, Eulalie Garcia, said she had known the priest since her childhood.

"My family has lived here for 35 years and we have always known him," she said.

"He was someone who was treasured by the community. He was very discreet and didn't like to draw attention to himself."

There was no immediate word on the identity of the hostage-takers, but France has been on high alert since the Bastille Day attack in Nice earlier this month, when a man ploughed a lorry into celebrating crowds, killing more than 80 people.

The Nice attack was carried out by Tunisian Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel, who was not a known jihadist but so-called Islamic State said he had acted in response to its calls to target civilians in countries that have been attacking it.

The BBC's Lucy Williamson in Paris says the French government has been under huge pressure to prevent further attacks.

Analysis - BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner



After criticisms of police shortcomings over the Nice attack on 14 July, French anti-terrorist police moved with commendable speed to close down this hostage situation in a Norman church.

Observers have pointed out that France and other countries are now moving more quickly towards what is called tactical intervention - overwhelming armed force aimed at minimising the period during which terrorists or armed criminals can threaten the public.

The selection of a church by the attackers, whatever their motives turn out to be, crosses a new red line in the grim history of recent attacks on continental Europe. The murder of an 84-year-old priest in this attack will have further inflamed public opinion.

News that one of the attackers was on the French government's terror watch-list, known as the S list, will prompt many to question its purpose if he can remain at large to carry a knife into a church.


France church attack: Priest killed in hostage-taking near Rouen - BBC News

Hollande says France is at war with ISIS: Islamist knifemen chanting 'Daesh' behead French priest, 86, and leave nun fighting for her life after storming Mass - before police shoot them dead




Doctor shot dead in Berlin hospital
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...rmed-knives-people-hostage-French-church.htmlAfter four savage attacks by Muslims in one week, Germans are living in fear - and this is just the beginning, says DANIEL JOHNSON
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...rmed-knives-people-hostage-French-church.htmlGerman suicide bomber appears in chilling ISIS video threatening that the West 'will never live peacefully'

Five people including the priest, two nuns and two parishioners were held by assailants who raided the church (inset) in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray, near the city of Rouen in Normandy, at 9am. The clergyman (left), named as 86-year-old Jacques Hamel, is believed to have been beheaded during the attack while another hostage is fighting for their life in hospital. The two attackers have been 'neutralised' by elite marksmen in a dramatic police operation (left) while the building is being searched for explosives. At least one of the men was dressed in Islamic clothing, according to French media reports, and an anti-terrorist unit has already taken up the investigation.
 

coldstream

on dbl secret probation
Oct 19, 2005
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Chillliwack, BC
Fr. Jacques Hamel, Martyr.. rip.. for an 86 year old member of a sacrificial priesthood.. enlistment in the Roman Matyrology.. with Peter, Paul and almost all of the original apostles is a singular honour. The Church is built on the blood of martyrs.
 
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Remington1

Council Member
Jan 30, 2016
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Christian priest? Now that has to be personal for thousands upon thousands. The symbolism alone should create an uproar around the globe. What happens when the states are unable to protect their citizens?
 

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
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the cuck dion is sad. sad.

maybe if the wimp condemned what happened and it's root fukkin' cause, grew a set of man-balls, he might come off as respectable.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
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the cuck dion is sad. sad.

maybe if the wimp condemned what happened and it's root fukkin' cause, grew a set of man-balls, he might come off as respectable.
And no one would pay attention to him if he did say that.....
 

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
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France is reaping what they sowed - borderless immigration - no vetting. I'm surprised that Germany hasn't had more of the same.


JMHO
 

Blackleaf

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borderless immigration

It has to. It's in the EU, and therefore has to have free movement of people from elsewhere in the EU. And, therefore, if Germany accepts thousands of "Syrian refugees" (which it has done) then those thousands of "Syrian refugees" are free to roam anywhere they like within the EU.

Islamic gang storms nudist pool in Germany yelling 'Allahu Akbar' and threatening to 'exterminate' women for being '****s'



The six bearded men in their 20s burst into the pool in Geldern, pictured here, in North Rhine-Westphalia and volleyed abusive threats in both German and Arabic as well as spitting at women and children. The gang's vitriol tirade was because bathers chose to swim in the nude, something the town is known for. It is understood the men then went to a water skiing facility where they abused more civilians and staff before they were chased out by one of the workers.
 

Blackleaf

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France church attack: Second suspect in priest killing named

BBC News
28 July 2016



Abdel Malik Petitjean, as he appeared on his driver's licence

French prosecutors have identified the second man involved in the killing of a priest in a Normandy church on Tuesday as 19-year-old Abdel Malik Petitjean.

Like the other attacker, Adel Kermiche, he was known to the security services.

The teenagers were shot dead by police outside the church in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray where they had killed Father Jacques Hamel, 86, and taken hostages.


France church attack: Second suspect in priest killing named - BBC News