According to Skynews a man
heard chanting "Allahu Akbar" ("God is greatest") has been
arrested in France after ploughing his car into crowds of people.
At least 13 people were
injured two of them seriously, after the driver targeted passers-by in five
different areas of the eastern city of Dijon.
Witnesses told police he
was also heard shouting he was "acting for the children of Palestine"
during the rampage, which lasted about half an hour.
It came a day after another
man, who was also heard shouting "Allahu Akbar," stabbed three police
officers in the central town of Joue-les-Tours.
The motives behind this
latest attack remain unclear. French president Francois Hollande has urged
authorities to display the "utmost vigilance" following the
incidents, and urged the public not to panic.
France's Interior Ministry
said the 40-year-old driver was known to authorities for petty offences dating
back to the 1990s.
"The man... is apparently unbalanced and had been in a
psychiatric hospital," one source said.
There is local media
speculation that two other people were in the car at the time of the attack.
French Prime Minister
Manuel Valls has tweeted to express his "solidarity" with the
victims, while Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve will travel to Dijon later
on Monday.
Two attacks within the
space of two days have heightened fears in France over the possibility of
further "lone wolf" atrocities.
Islamic State and other
terrorist organisations have repeatedly called for attacks against France,
partly due to its military participation in US-led strikes in Iraq.
Anti-terrorism police are
investigating Saturday's attack at the police station in Joue-les-Tours, which
left two of the three officers seriously injured.
The 20-year-old attacker
was shot dead at the scene.
Mr Cazeneuve told
television station TF1 he was "very unstable".
Police suspect the attack
to have been motivated by radical Islam.
The Interior Ministry has
said it was too early to tell whether there was any connection between the two
incidents.
Skynews

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