A manhunt is under way in northeastern France for a gunman who killed three people and wounded a dozen others at a Christmas market in the French city of Strasbourg on Tuesday evening.
The attacker opened fire at around 8pm local time (19:00 GMT) on one of the city’s busiest streets, sending crowds of evening shoppers fleeing for safety.
Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said the gunman, who exchanged shots with security forces twice as he escaped, had evaded a police dragnet and was on the run, raising concerns of a follow-up attack.
“The government has raised its security threat to the highest level and is bolstering border controls,” Castaner told a late-night news conference held in the city.
“We will also reinforce security at all Christmas markets to prevent copycat attacks.”
Police detained five people in overnight searches around the city, Laurent Nunez, secretary of state for the Interior Ministry, said on France-Inter radio.
Nunez said eight of the injured are in serious condition, and the city mayor said some had head wounds.
The motive for the attack is not known. The counterterrorism prosecutor opened an investigation while 350 security agents and two helicopters were hunting for the attacker.
Police identified the suspect as Strasbourg-born Cherif Chekatt, 29, who was known to the intelligence services as a potential security risk.
“The hunt is continuing,” Nunez said on France Inter radio, adding that it’s possible that the suspect might have left France.
Officials said German police have also tightened border controls across the Rhine river.
Nunez said the suspect had a police record and had been in jail several times, most recently at the end of 2015.
Police union officials told the Associated Press news agency that authorities went to the alleged attacker’s residence earlier on Tuesday to arrest him, but he was not at home.
People in the city’s Neudorf area and Etoile park were told to stay where they were as officers hunted the attacker on the ground and from the air.
Later on Tuesday, police started to release thousands of people confined in buildings, in groups of about 100. A police helicopter is circling overhead, and entire neighbourhoods of the city – which lies on the border with Germany – remain cordoned off.
The European Parliament, which is sitting in Strasbourg this week, was put into lockdown.
Emmanuel Maurel, a member of the European Parliament, said he had heard the shots.
“From my hotel window, I saw passersby dragging someone who was injured and onlookers panicking,” he wrote on Twitter. “Soldiers and police have cordoned off the area. We’re being told to stay in the hotel.”
A local shopkeeper told BFM TV that the shooting lasted for about 10 minutes. “There were gunshots and people running everywhere,” the shopkeeper added.
The Christmas market was being held amid tight security this year, with unauthorised vehicles excluded from surrounding streets during opening hours and checkpoints set up on bridges and access points to search pedestrians’ bags.
A Reuters news agency reporter was among 30 to 40 people being held in the basement of a supermarket for their own safety in central Strasbourg, waiting for police to clear the area. Lights were switched off and bottles of water handed out.
Resident Yoann Bazard told the AP by telephone that he heard “two or three shots” and screams before he went to a window and saw people running.
“After that, I closed the shutters. Then, I heard more shots, closer this time,” the 27-year-old said.
“There were two or three episodes like that … As it got close, it was really shocking. There were a lot of screams.”
Security forces stand guard after a shooting near a Christmas market in Strasbourg, France [Frederick Florin/AFP] |
President Emmanuel Macron was informed of the shooting and was being updated as events unfurled, an Elysee Palace official said.
“My thoughts are with the victims of the Strasbourg shooting, which I condemn with the utmost firmness,” tweeted Jean-Claude Juncker, head of the European Commission, the EU executive. “Strasbourg is an excellent symbol of peace and European Democracy. Values that we will always defend.”
France has been put on alert in recent years after attacks targeted crowded spaces.
In 2016, a truck rammed into a Bastille Day crowd in Nice, killing more than 80 people, while in November 2015, coordinated attacks on the Bataclan concert hall and other sites in Paris claimed about 130 lives. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attacks.
There have also been attacks in Paris on a policeman on the Champs-Elysees avenue, the satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo and a kosher store.