Three Sudanese arrested over French ‘terror’ stabbing

France is in the third week of a national lockdown, with all but essential businesses shut and people confined to their homes. (AFP)
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Updated 06 April 2020
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Three Sudanese arrested over French ‘terror’ stabbing

  • A source close to the probe said the alleged attacker had said that “he did not remember what happened”

PARIS: A third person has been detained in an anti-terrorism investigation in France over a knife attack south of Lyon that left two people dead, authorities said on Sunday.
The third arrest was made on Saturday night, and all three of the suspects are Sudanese, the French anti-terror prosecutor’s office said.
In televised remarks on Sunday night, French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner did not confirm the assault as a terrorist attack, adding that police were still investigating it.
President Emmanuel Macron described the attack as an “odious” incident that further saddened a country already suffering an ordeal.
“My thoughts are with the victims of the Romans-sur-Isere attack — the injured, their families,” he tweeted.
Macron promised that “light will be shed” on the crime.
On Saturday, a man attacked residents with a knife in the small town of Romans-sur-Isere, injuring several people in addition to the two fatalities. Residents, who were in lockdown amid the coronavirus pandemic, were carrying out their permitted daily food shopping.
France is currently in lockdown because of the coronavirus pandemic. People are only allowed out to buy basic necessities or for exercise.
France has been on high alert since 2015, when Paris was hit by a series of attacks attributed to Daesh.
The suspect killed two French managers of French cafe La  Charrette, in a town of 35,000 people in the southeast of France — Romans-sur-Isere.
Five people were injured in the spree, two remain in intensive care in a stable condition.
The arrested suspect, 33, was described by the mayor of the area as having obtained a political refugee status.
“Anyone who had the misfortune to find themselves in his way were attacked,” said Mayor Marie-Helene Thoraval.
Ahmed-Osman obtained refugee status in France in June 2017, according to investigators.
He was previously unknown to the police or intelligence services.
The initial investigation has “brought to light a determined, murderous course” that was targeted “to seriously disturb public order through intimidation or terror,” the prosecutor’s office said.
A source close to the probe said the alleged attacker had said that “he did not remember what happened.”
An initial interrogation was delayed as Ahmed-Osman was very agitated.  The prosecutor’s office also claimed that a search of the suspect’s apartment had uncovered “handwritten documents with religious connotations.”
The people of the French town were in shock. They knew the managers of the Charrette cafe who were killed.

HIGHLIGHTS

• President Emmanuel Macron described the attack as an ‘odious’ incident.

• Macron promised that ‘light will be shed’ on the crime.

Arab News interviewed a Sudanese also having asylum status in France. He was a former roommate of the alleged assailant who lived with him in Grenoble in 2017 before the alleged attacker moved to Romans-sur-Isere.
Abdel Moneim, who is employed in public works currently in Lyon, told Arab News: “I met him in 2017 but I don’t know when he arrived in France from Sudan; he got the right to asylum in France and was sent by the French to live in this town.”
He said: “I stopped contact with him when we both moved but I don’t think he is connected to a terrorist network. I think he is sick and even so this does not justify the crime. I know he was sick in hospital in Grenoble.  But I don’t know if he was in hospital because he was disturbed. He also was on drugs from time to time. But I know he was psychologically disturbed, I think the French police will soon find out, but I really don’t think he belongs to a terrorist network. The Sudanese are peaceful people, not violent. This was proved by our peaceful revolution.”
Asked if he knew the two other Sudanese arrested with him, he said that their names were not disclosed by the police so he did not know their identities.
Arab News contacted the French presidency to find out if more information was available on the Sudanese attacker but nothing more was disclosed on Sunday.
David Olivier Reverdy, from the National Police Alliance union, said that Ahmed-Osman asked police to kill him when they came to arrest him. The assailant first went into a tobacco shop where he attacked the owner and his wife, said Mayor Thoraval.
He then went to a butcher’s shop where he seized another knife before heading to the town center and attacking people outside a bakery.


UPDATE 5-Trump threatens Canada with 100 percent tariff over pending trade deal with China

Updated 6 sec ago
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UPDATE 5-Trump threatens Canada with 100 percent tariff over pending trade deal with China

  • Carney’s China deal aims to reset strained relations
  • US-Canada tensions rise over Greenland, global order remarks

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on Saturday he would impose a 100 percent tariff on Canada if it follows through on a trade deal with China and warned Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney ​that a deal would endanger his country.
“China will eat Canada alive, completely devour it, including the destruction of their businesses, social fabric, and general way of life,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.
“If Canada makes a deal with China, it will immediately be hit with a 100 percent Tariff against all Canadian goods and products coming into the USA.”
In a video on Saturday, Carney urged Canadians to buy domestic products, but did not directly mention Trump’s tariff threat.
“With our economy under threat from abroad, Canadians have made a choice to focus on what we can control,” Carney said. “We can’t control what other nations do, we can be our own best customer.”
The Canadian prime minister this month traveled to China to reset the countries’ strained relationship and reached a trade deal with Canada’s second-biggest trading partner after the US
Immediately after Carney’s China trip, Trump sounded supportive. “It’s ‌a good thing ‌for him to sign a trade deal,” Trump told reporters at the White House on ‌January ⁠16. “If you can ​get a ‌deal with China, you should do that.”
“There is no pursuit of a free trade deal with China. What was achieved was resolution on several important tariff issues,” Dominic LeBlanc, the minister responsible for Canada-US Trade, said on Saturday in a post on X.
The Chinese embassy in Canada said in a statement to Reuters that China was ready to work with Canada to implement the important consensus reached by the leaders of the two countries.
US-Canada tensions have grown in recent days following Carney’s criticism of Trump’s pursuit of Greenland.

MORE PRESSURE ON CANADIAN INDUSTRIES
On Saturday, Trump suggested China would try to use Canada to evade US tariffs.
“If Governor Carney thinks he is going to make Canada a ‘Drop Off Port’ for China to send goods and products ⁠into the United States, he is sorely mistaken,” Trump said, using a title for Carney that refers to Trump’s past calls for Canada to become the 51st US state.
In a second Saturday ‌post, Trump said, “The last thing the World needs is to have China take over ‍Canada. It’s NOT going to happen, or even come close to ‍happening!“
If Trump makes good on Saturday’s threat, the new tariff would greatly increase US duties on its northern neighbor, adding pressure to Canadian ‍industrial sectors such as metal manufacturing, autos and machinery.
Relations between Carney and Trump seemed relatively placid until the Canadian leader this week spoke out forcefully against Trump’s pursuit of Greenland.
Carney subsequently at the World Economic Forum called on nations to accept that a rules-based global order was over and pointed to Canada as an example of how “middle powers” might act together to avoid being victimized by American hegemony.
Carney, during his speech in Davos, Switzerland, did not directly call out ​Trump or the US by name. However, the prime minister said “middle powers must act together because if you are not at the table, you are on the menu.”
Many world leaders and industry titans present at the Switzerland confab responded ⁠with a standing ovation.
Trump shot back in his own Davos speech and said Canada “lives because of the United States,” a statement that Carney rejected on Thursday.
“Canada and the United States have built a remarkable partnership in the economy, in security and in rich cultural exchange,” Carney said in Quebec. “Canada doesn’t live because of the United States. Canada thrives because we are Canadian.”
Since then, Trump has dug in against Canada, revoking its invitation to his Board of Peace that he wants to deal with international conflicts and Gaza’s future.
After Carney’s election last year, Trump and Carney shared a congenial tone. “I think the relationship is going to be very strong,” Trump said at the time.
But Trump this month dismissed the mega trade deal between the US, Canada, and Mexico — up for renegotiation in July — as “irrelevant.”
Trump has issued many tariff threats since returning to the presidency, though in several cases he has paused them during negotiations or relented entirely. This week, Trump backed off his recent threat to impose stiff tariffs on European allies after the NATO chief and other leaders promised to step up security in the Arctic.
“We hope the two governments can come to a better understanding quickly that can ‌alleviate further concerns for businesses who face the immediate consequences of torqued up uncertainty,” the Canadian Chamber of Commerce’s Matthew Holmes said in a statement.