France Police Arrest Suspects in Lyon Parcel Bomb Attack
French
police have arrested four people after a suspected parcel bomb exploded in Lyon
last week, injuring 13 people.
The device,
packed with screws and ball bearings, detonated outside a bakery on Friday
afternoon.
One of those
arrested, a 24-year-old man, is the suspected bomber, prosecutors say. Another
man and a woman were also reportedly detained.
Police had
been hunting for a man seen cycling near the scene of the blast wearing a
balaclava and rucksack.
Anti-terrorist
prosecutors are leading the investigation, co-ordinating with Lyon police and
France's internal security service, the DGSI.
French media
report that one suspect is an IT student of Algerian nationality. A source told
news agency Reuters that police arrested him in Lyon after tailing him in the
street. It reportedly decided not to arrest him in his apartment in case there
were explosives in the building.
The second
suspect, according to local press, is a minor who attends a school in the city.
Two other
people, a man and a woman, have also been arrested. They are reportedly the
parents of one of the suspects.
Last week,
police released a picture from CCTV footage of a person they believe carried
out the bombing.
The
explosion struck near the corner of two crowded pedestrian streets in Lyon's
historic city centre.
Investigators
have recovered screws, ball bearings, along with a printed circuit, batteries
and a remote-controlled trigger device.
Denis
Broliquier, the city's district mayor, told press that "the charge was too
small to kill," and a government source told AFP news agency it had been a
"relatively weak explosive charge".
Those hurt,
including a girl aged eight, appear to have suffered superficial injuries.
French
Interior Minister Christophe Castaner confirmed one of the arrests in a
Tweet on Monday, saying joint action by several agencies had been
"decisive".
No-one has
claimed responsibility for the attack.
The last
time a parcel bomb had exploded in France was in 2007 when a device killed one
person and injured another in front of a law office in Paris. Police never
found the bomber.
Jihadist gun
and bomb attacks have killed more than 250 people in France since 2015 and the
country remains on high alert, with military patrols a regular feature of
security in cities including Lyon.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-europe
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