Thursday, March 22, 2012

VOA News: Europe: Jewish School Shooting Suspect Dead

VOA News: Europe
Europe Voice of America
Jewish School Shooting Suspect Dead
Mar 22nd 2012, 11:47

French officials say the suspect in the killing of seven people is dead after a more than 24-hour standoff in the southern city of Toulouse.

French Interior Minister Claude Gueant said Thursday police stormed the apartment where 24-year-old Mohammed Merah had been holed up, and were met with gunfire before he jumped out the window. Reports say three policemen were wounded in the shootout.

Officails said earlier that the suspect had expressed a desire "to die with weapons in his hands."

Merah, a Frenchman of Algerian origin, is accused of murdering a rabbi and three children - ages four, five and seven -- at the Jewish school in Toulouse Monday before driving off on a motorcycle. French police say the alleged shooter used the same gun to kill three French soldiers of African and French Caribbean origin last week in Toulouse and a nearby town.

Two police officers were wounded in earlier attempts to storm the Toulouse house where the suspect was hiding.

Interior Minister Gueant says the suspect was angry about French military intervention abroad, and said he wanted to avenge Palestinian children killed in the Middle East. Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad denounced the killings, saying it is time for criminals to stop using the Palestinians to justify their cause.

Police say they received a tip from a Yamaha dealer in Toulouse who said he remembered that a young man had asked to have an antitheft device removed from a motorbike. Authorities say it was the same kind used in the recent murders.

U.S. President Barack Obama called French President Nicolas Sarkozy while aboard Air Force One en route to Nevada. A White House statement says Obama expressed his solidarity with Sarkozy and the government and people of France. The statement said President Obama underscored that the American people stand shoulder to shoulder with "our French allies and friends in this trying time."

During a funeral for two of the paratroopers in Montauban, north of Toulouse, President Sarkozy said the slain soldiers were victims of "terrorist executions." He added that the suspected gunman will fail in his attempt to divide the country.

Far right political leader Marine Le Pen lashed out against "Islamic fundamentalism" in an interview on Israeli radio Wednesday.  

The bodies of the rabbi and three children were buried Wednesday in Israel.  

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