French police hunt two brothers accused of Charlie Hebdo terror attack
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French authorities are searching for two chief suspects in Wednesday's deadly attack in Paris on the offices of Charlie Hebdo, a satirical magazine,聽which left 12 people dead in France's deadliest terrorist incident in a generation.
Thousands of police and聽counter-terrorism officers are searching in northern France for the two armed suspects,聽Said and Ch茅rif Kouachi, who are brothers, remain at large.聽A third suspect, Hamyd Mourad, turned himself in at a police station in a small town about 145 miles northeast of Paris after learning his name was linked to the attack.
Speaking on RTL radio, Prime Minister Manuel Valls said authorities had made several overnight arrests and that the possibility of a new attack by the two suspects 鈥,鈥 The New York Times reports. An unnamed security official put the arrest total at seven.
鈥淲e are facing an unprecedented terrorist threat, both internally and externally,鈥 Mr. Valls said, adding that, 鈥渢here was not zero risk.鈥
In an incident likely to rattle nerves in Paris, a聽policewoman was killed in a shootout in southern Paris on Thursday morning. The shooting聽聽in the area as the manhunt for the two brothers expanded, but police didn't immediately link it to the Charlie Hebdo attack, Reuters reports. The policewoman wasn't involved in the manhunt for the suspects and had been called to a routine traffic incident.聽
Valls said the suspects in the attack on Charlie Hebdo were known to French authorities and had been tracked before. Ch茅rif Kouachi was for recruiting jihadists to fight in Iraq, the Associated Press reports. Both brothers were also named in connection with a plot to help an Islamic extremist, who bombed a Paris metro station in 1995, escape from jail.
The brothers are , the BBC reports.
They allegedly frequented a mosque in the Stalingrad district of Paris, where they came under the influence of a radical imam called Farid Benyettou. He reportedly encouraged them to study Islam at his home and at a Muslim centre in their neighbourhood.
Given his track record, the fact that Ch茅rif Kouachi allegedly pulled off such a brazen attack may raise concerns in France and across Europe. It's still unclear whether the brothers had any foreign support or trained abroad. European security agencies fear that militants from Europe who fight in Iraq and Syria could in future聽stage attacks at home.
海角大神 reports that France has Europe鈥檚 largest Muslim population and the largest number of citizens who have joined groups such as the self-described Islamic State. Some 1,000 French have traveled to fight in Syria, according to authorities.
France and the rest of Europe are on edge over the threat of terrorism, especially as many European citizens have joined jihadist groups in Syria聽and Iraq. Just before Christmas, three separate attacks spooked the nation. In one, a man yelled 鈥淎llahu Akbar" before striking pedestrians in the eastern city of Dijon. And Prime Minister Manuel Valls said recently that France has "never before faced such a high threat linked to terrorism.鈥
Charlie Hebdo, which directs its irrelevant satire at almost everyone, has repeatedly offended Muslims for its caricatures of the prophet Muhammad. The magazine鈥檚 editor and two police officers were among those killed on Wednesday.