Skip to main content

FM
Former Member

Four shot dead at French Jewish school

By Guillaume Serries

 

TOULOUSE, France (Reuters) - A gunman on a motorbike shot dead at least four people, including three children, at a Jewish school in Toulouse on Monday, just days after three soldiers were killed in similar shootings in the same area of southwest France.

A school student is escorted as he leaves the Ozar Hatorah Jewish school in Toulouse, southwestern France, March 19, 2012 after a man on a scooter opened fire outside the school killing two children and one adult, a police source said. REUTERS/Jean-Philippe Arles

 

"I saw two people dead in front of the school, an adult and a child ... Inside, it was a vision of horror, the bodies of two small children," one father, searching for his son at the Ozar Hatorah school among crowds of distraught parents and children, told RTL radio.

The gunman killed a 30-year old Hebrew teacher, his two children aged three and six, and another child, Toulouse prosecutor Michel Valet said. A 17-year-old was wounded.

"The attacker was shooting people outside the school, then pursued children into the school, before fleeing on a heavy motorbike," Valet told reporters.

The soldiers, one of Caribbean and two of Muslim origin, also been killed in drive-by shootings and prosecutors opened an anti-terrorism investigation into all three attacks although it was not clear whether the motive was political or purely racist.

President Nicolas Sarkozy and Francois Hollande, the Socialist opposing him in his uphill bid for re-election in May, both rushed to the scene.

Sarkozy said he was struck by the similarities between the three attacks.

"We don't know who this killer is and what is the exact link is to the drama that has hit the military community," Sarkozy said after arriving in Toulouse. "Everything must be done so that the killer is stopped and has to pay for his crimes."

"Our schools must keep functioning, our compatriots that want to worship at synagogues, mosques and churches must be able to continue to do so. We should not give ground to terror."

The prosecutor confirmed that the same calibre firearm was used in Monday's attack as in the killing of the three soldiers in two separate attacks by a man who escaped on a scooter. He could not say if it was exactly the same weapon.

Police cordoned off the school and a spokesman for the interior ministry said security was being tightened at all other Jewish schools in the country. France's 600,000-strong Jewish community is Europe's largest.

There was mayhem around the small school in a leafy upscale neighbourhood of Toulouse, a booming industrial town. "All the children at this school were my children," one tearful mother told LCI television.

"HORROR"

The father looking for his son expressed disbelief: "How can they attack something as sacred as a school, attack children only 60 centimetres (two feet) tall?" he told RTL radio.

As messages of condolence poured in from across Europe, representatives of France's Jewish community voiced their solidarity.

"The whole Jewish community is in mourning," said Rabbi Moshe Lewin, a spokesman for France's great rabbi. "In the face of such a drama, such a horror, one cannot but go there."

Public prosecutor Valet said investigators were studying video evidence from the school shooting and the attack on Thursday in the nearby town of Montauban that killed two soldiers and left a third seriously injured.

The three men, aged between 24 and 28, were shot while in uniform as they tried to withdraw money from a cash machine close to the barracks of the 17th parachute regiment.

A third soldier, aged 30, was killed the previous weekend in Toulouse. Investigators said the same weapon had been used in both incidents.

The shootings could thrust security back to the top of the agenda in a bitter electoral campaign that has been dominated by issues of taxation and immigration.

Political analyst Stefane Rozes, head of CAP political consultancy, said the shooting was unlikely to have a decisive impact on France's election campaign as all candidates were strongly condemning the violence

 

 

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Toulouse shooting: Israeli PM condemns 'despicable murder of Jews'

A murderous attack on Jewish schoolchildren today has prompted worldwide condemnation and a call for action from Jewish groups.

A man on a motorbike has opened fire outside a Jewish school in France, killing a father and his two sons along with at least one other child, a Toulouse prosecutor has said
Parents and friends confort each other as they walk away from the scene of the shooting at the Ozar Hatorah Jewish school in Toulous Photo: REMY GABALDA/AFP/Getty Images
 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the "despicable murder of Jews" by a gunman who opened fire at a Jewish school in France, killing four people.

"In France today there was a despicable murder of Jews, including small children," Mr Netanyahu told a meeting of his Likud party, hours after the incident in the southwestern city of Toulouse.

"It is too early to determine exactly what the background to the murderous act was, but we certainly cannot rule out the option that it was motivated by violent and murderous anti-Semitism."

Children aged three, six and 10, and a 30-year-old religious education teacher were mown down as they arrived for class at the Ozar Hatorah school in Toulouse on Monday.

The attack is the third in a wave of similar incidents that have prompted an anti-terrorism probe by French police. Monday's incident was the first one in which anti-Semitism appeared to play a role, however.

The Vatican has also condemned the "heinous" attack, while Germany and the US have condemned the shooting.

"The attack in Toulouse against a teacher and three Jewish children is a horrific and heinous act," Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi told journalists, noting that it followed other "senseless violence" in France.

The Israeli foreign ministry expressed Tel Aviv's shock at the news of the attack. "We are horrified by this attack and we trust the French authorities to shed full light on this tragedy and bring the perpetrators of these murders to justice," Israeli foreign ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor told AFP.

German foreign minister Guido Westerwelle said he was "deeply shocked" by the "terrible tragedy" and expressed sympathy to the parents, relatives and friends of the four victims who included three children.

"I hope the perpetrators are found quickly and are called to account," he said in a written statement.

"Anti-Semitism and violence against Jewish institutions or people of Jewish faith have no place in Europe and must be rigorously punished," he added.

France's Grand Rabbi Gilles Bernheim has expressed shock at the attack. "I am horrifed by what happened this morning in Toulouse in front of the Jewish school," he told AFP, adding that he would leave immediately for the southwestern French city.

The head of the Jewish students union of France (UEJF), Jonathan Hayoun, called on the authorities "to reinforce security at Jewish schools and synagogues". The government has already given the order for security to be tightened at religious instituations including Jewish schools.

He also said in a statement that "anti-Semitic and racist speech has created a climate of insecurity for Jews in France".

The former head of the German Jewish community and current Jewish leader in the southern city of Munich, Charlotte Knobloch, called for a complete investigation.

"This attack on innocent children is heinous and stems from great inhumanity," said Ms Knobloch, who survived the Holocaust in hiding as a child, in a written statement.

European Jewish groups denounced the deadly shooting as a "barbarity" and urged authorities to do everything to catch the gunman.

"While many of the details are still emerging, it appears that this was a premeditated attack with the intention to murder Jewish children," said Moshe Kantor, president of the European Jewish Congress.

"We hope the authorities will spare no resources in apprehending the perpetrator," he said.

"Whoever did this is looking to target the Jewish community at its weakest point, its youth, in the hopes of spreading fear throughout the community," Mr Kantor said.

"They will not succeed, the Jews of Europe in general and the Jews of France in particular have a long history of standing firm against hatred and violence," he added.

"I know as a community French Jewry will send a message of strength and resilience in the face of those who wish to terrorise them."

He continued: "The greatest defence against race-based murder is not by creating higher walls and more effective security systems, but by teaching and imparting tolerance in the classrooms."

The Brussels-based Rabbinical Centre of Europe (RCE) said: "It is difficult to believe that the main challenge to European Jewry remains anti-Semitism and threats to their lives."

RCE deputy director Rabbi Aryeh Goldberg added: "This act of barbarity and murder will be met with a Jewish response.

"We will bury the dead, look after the injured, and we will demand justice is pursued through the appropriate channels," he said.

"This attack is an attack on the whole Jewish community; we feel the pain of the families who have lost loved ones and as a community we will show our reaction," Mr Goldberg said in a statement.

"If there are people who want to scare the Jewish community into submission, our response will be to show them that we will not be bowed, the opposite is true. We will build more schools, synagogues and other Jewish institutions."

The government has handed the investigation to anti-terror police and the French presidential election campaign has been effectively suspended, with both right-winger Mr Sarkozy and his main rival, socialist Francois Hollande, deciding to visit the school.

FM

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×