Police shot the driver dead
after he drove the truck two kilometres (1.3 miles) through a crowd that had
been enjoying a fireworks display on France’s July 14 national holiday.
The palm-lined Promenade
des Anglais was left strewn with bodies as hundreds fled in terror.
The gunman smashed a truck
into a crowd of revellers celebrating Bastille Day in the French Riviera city
of Nice, killing at least 84 people in what President Francois Hollande on
Friday called a “terrorist” attack.
Authorities said they found
identity papers belonging to a 31-year-old French-Tunisian citizen in the
19-tonne truck, and that the driver had fired a gun several times before police
shot him dead.
The man was known to
police, authorities said.
Hollande said in a
televised national address that the attack was of an “undeniable terrorist
nature” and he confirmed that several children were among the dead.
“France was struck on its
national day … the symbol of freedom,” said Hollande.
Interior ministry spokesman
Pierre-Henry Brandet said 84 people were killed and scores injured, including
18 in “critical condition”.
Bastille Day is a
celebration of everything France holds dear — its secular republic and the
values of “Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite” (Freedom, Equality, Fraternity).
Earlier Thursday, onlookers
had enjoyed a day of military pomp and ceremony in Paris — where armed forces,
tanks and fighter jets swooped down the Champs Elysees avenue — and spectacular
firework displays.
–‘Holding cold hands’–
In a video viewed over
4,500 times on Facebook, a trembling Tarubi Wahid Mosta recounted the horror on
the promenade, where he took photos of an abandoned doll and pushchair and came
home with a victim’s Yorkshire terrier.
“I almost stepped on a
corpse, it was horrible. It looked like a battlefield,” he said.
In a series of posts, he
described the sense of helplessness faced with the carnage.
“All these bodies and their
families … they spent hours on the ground holding the cold hands of bodies
dismembered by the truck. You can’t even speak to them or comfort them.”
Forensic police were still
swarming the promenade as the sun rose over the picturesque bay, which has
drawn sun-seekers and the jet-set since the 19th century.
The truck was still in the
position where it had ground to a halt, its front badly damaged and riddled
with bullet holes and its tyres burst.
A police source said the
vehicle had been rented in the region “a few days ago”.
Robert Holloway, an AFP
reporter who witnessed the white truck driving at speed into the crowd,
described scenes of “absolute chaos”.
“We saw people hit and bits
of debris flying around. I had to protect my face from flying debris,” he said.
While officials made an
urgent call for blood donors, dozens took to Twitter with desperate pleas from
for news of loved ones.
Pictures of a young girl
with braces or a teenager pulling a funny face were among those posted.
World leaders rushed to
condemn the carnage, with US President Barack Obama blasting “what appears to
be a horrific terrorist attack”.
The attack was the third
major strike against France in less than 18 months and prosecutors said
anti-terrorist investigators were handling the probe.
It comes eight months after
Islamic State attacks on bars, restaurants, a concert hall and the national
stadium in Paris left 130 people dead.
Hollande announced he would
extend France’s state of emergency for three months in the wake of this latest
attack and “step up” the government’s action against Islamic State targets in
Syria and Iraq.
“We will continue striking
those who attack us on our own soil,” he said.
He also called up army
reservists to bolster security services that are stretched to the limit.
France a no go area may their souls rest in peace
ReplyDeleteMay their soul rest in peace, God take control
ReplyDeleteDreadful, France again
ReplyDelete