Friday, March 23, 2012

Questions abound the day after the shootout ....

http://www.france24.com/en/20120323-french-officials-face-questions-over-toulouse-gunman-merah-intelligence-failure


Officials face questions over Toulouse gunman

French officials and security forces are facing questions over how Mohamed Merah, who confessed to killing three French soldiers and four people at a Jewish school, was able to carry out three separate attacks despite having been under surveillance.

By News Wires (text)
 
AP - France’s prime minister fended off suggestions Friday that anti-terrorism authorities fell down on the job in monitoring a radical Islamist who gunned down children, paratroopers and a rabbi in a wave of killings that revolted the country.
Investigators were questioning Mohamed Merah’s brother as they search for possible accomplices in his close-range killings of seven people since March 11.
Merah, who claimed allegiance to al-Qaida and had spent time in prison, died Thursday during a gunfight with police following a 32-hour standoff outside his apartment in the southwestern city of Toulouse. He was a 23-year-old Frenchman of Algerian origin.

TOULOUSE SHOOTINGS: AN INTELLIGENCE FAILURE?

French intelligence services had been aware of Merah’s trips to Afghanistan and Pakistan’s militant stronghold of Waziristan in recent years, and he had been on a U.S. no-fly list since 2010.
Some politicians, French media and Toulouse residents questioned why authorities didn’t stop him before March 11, when he committed the first of three deadly shooting attacks.
Even French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said there needed to be “clarity” on why he wasn’t arrested earlier.
The daily Liberation listed seven questions about the case on its front page Friday, including “Why wasn’t Merah monitored more?”
French Prime Minister Francois Fillon told RTL radio Friday that authorities “at no moment” suspected Merah would be dangerous despite a long criminal record.
“The fact of belonging to a Salafist (ultraconservative Muslim) organization is not unto itself a crime. We must not mix religious fundamentalism and terrorism, even if naturally we well know the links that unite the two,” Fillon said.

Mohamed Merah, 23, died in a March 22 police raid on his home in Toulouse after a 32-hour stand-off.

Three Jewish schoolchildren, a rabbi and three paratroopers died in France’s worst Islamist terrorist violence since a wave of attacks in the 1990s by Algerian extremists. Merah told negotiators he killed them to avenge the deaths of Palestinian children and to protest the French army’s involvement in Afghanistan as well as France’ law against the Islamic face veil.
In response to the slayings, Fillon said President Nicolas Sarkozy’s conservative government is working on new anti-terrorism legislation that would be drafted within two weeks. He said the government will consult with leaders of the Senate, which is controlled by the opposition.
Cathy Fontaine, 43, who runs a beauty salon down the street from the building where Merah was killed, said France should have a “zero tolerance” policy for people who seek out training in Afghanistan and potentially refuse to let them back in the country.
“An individual who goes to be trained in Afghanistan, you have to follow him,” she said.
Families of the victims, meanwhile, were frustrated that Merah was not taken alive.
“Imad’s parents feel that the justice they were expecting was stolen from them,” said lawyer Mehana Mouhou, lawyer for the family of the first paratrooper killed, Imad Ibn-Ziaten. “His mother wanted an answer to the question, ‘why did he kill my son?””

Syndicate contentFRANCE 24 EXCLUSIVE

The lawyer also questioned why hours of negotiations between police and Merah failed Wednesday. Merah repeatedly promised to surrender, then eventually changed his mind.
“They could have very well not killed him. There were no hostages. The neighbors were evacuated,” Mouhou said.
The chief of France’s elite RAID police unit, which conducted the operation, told Le Monde that Merah was probably killed by a sniper. He said the gunman had been waiting “like a fighter, with an unflagging determination.”
“We tried to exhaust him all night before retaking the apartment,” Amaury de Hauteclocque was quoted as saying by the newspaper. His commandos slipped into the apartment but Merah was waiting for them, standing in 30 centimeters (a foot) of water after a pipe burst when it was pierced by a bullet during the first assault, the report said.
“I’d given the order to only fire back with stun grenades. But as he moved through the apartment he tried to kill my men who were on the balcony. It’s probably one of the snipers that got him,” he said.
He said 15 men had taken part in the assault, with 60-odd people participating in the entire operation. 

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