French man directly
involved in terror attacks being hunted by officials, 11/15/15, FoxNews
A French man
believed to be directly involved in Friday's Islamic terror attack in Paris
that killed 129 and injured 352 was on the run Sunday afternoon and was being
hunted by authorities, French security officials said.
The man, one of
three brothers believed involved in the killings in central Paris, rented the
black Volkswagen Polo used by a group of hostage-takers that left at least 89
people dead inside the Bataclan concert hall, one official said.
One other police
official said the manhunt is believed to involve at least one suspect. Both
officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation was ongoing.
One of the suspect's brothers has been arrested in Belgium and another brother
died in the attack, the first official said.
Three of the seven
Islamist suicide bombers have already been identified as French citizens, as
was at least one of seven other people arrested in neighboring Belgium in
connection to the deadly attacks.
One suicide
attacker, who was identified from a skin sample, had been living in a Paris
suburb, French police said Sunday. A Belgian official said two of the seven
suicide bombers were French men living in Brussels, and one of the attackers
was living in the Molenbeek neighborhood, which is considered a focal point for
religious extremism and fighters going to Syria. Among the seven people
arrested was another French citizen living in the Belgian capital. The new information
highlighted growing fears of possible homegrown terrorism in France, a
country that has exported more jihadis than any other in Europe.
Ismael Omar
Mostefai, a 29-year-old French citizen who had been flagged for ties to Islamic
radicalism, was identified Sunday as one of the assailants by a French judicial
official who spoke to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity because
the investigation is ongoing.
Mostefai's ID comes
as Balkan authorities work to track the travels of a man whose Syrian passport
was found next to a dead suicide bomber at France's national stadium on Friday
night. It is still not clear if that Syrian passport is authentic, or if it
belonged to the dead bomber. European officials say there is a brisk trade in
fake Syrian passports to help people obtain refugee status in the European
Union.
Serbian police said
Sunday the owner of the passport, identified only as A.A., formally requested
asylum in Serbia. Prosecutor Francois Molins told Sky News the passport was
found at the Stade de France bombing site and belonged to a Syrian citizen born
in 1990.
Officials said the
passport holder entered Greece on Oct. 3 through Leros, one of the eastern
Aegean islands that tens of thousand of people fleeing war and poverty have
been using as a gateway into the 28-nation EU. Serbian police said the holder
of the passport then registered at its border entry with Macedonia on Oct. 7.
Croatian police said the passport holder was checked at a refugee center on
Oct. 8, but the man was not flagged as suspicious and continued his journey
toward Hungary and Austria, according to police spokeswoman Helena Biocic.
The FBI is sending
to Paris a team of agents that specialize in recovering information from
electronic devices, the New York Times
reported on Sunday. The FBI is reportedly anticipating a bevy of information
coming from French officials in the days ahead and wants to have sufficient
manpower to handle and interpret it.
While investigators
work to figure out how the attack was planned and if anyone connected with it
is still at large, the so-called "City of Light" has gone dark as top
Paris tourist attractions such as the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre art museum
remain closed in the wake of the attacks perpetrated by Mostefai and seven
other terrorists. The Islamist attackers wielded AK-47s and wore suicide belts
while carrying out a series of coordinated attacks at six sites around Paris on
Friday night.
Mostefai,
identified by his fingerprints, was one of the terrorists inside the Bataclan
concert hall, where at least 89 people were murdered during a concert by the
American band Eagles of Death Metal, Sky News reported. He was known to the
French Secret Service for his radicalism, Fox News has confirmed.
Little is known
about Mostefai's background, but French investigators have learned he grew up
in a tough French housing project and turned to radicalism five years ago.
The mayor of the
French city of Chartres, Jean-Pierre Gorges, identified Mostefai as a resident
in a Facebook post, and Molins told Sky News that Mostefai had a criminal
record, but didn’t spend time in jail.
"In 2010, he
was blacklisted by the police due to extreme behaviors, but never been
classified into any illegal extremist groups," Molins said.
An unidentified
prosecutor told AP Mostefai was identified from fingerprints on a finger found
in the carnage of the Paris attacks Friday night. "In 2010, he was
blacklisted by the police due to extreme behaviors . . ."- Prosecutor
Francois Molins
The official said
Mostefai’s father, a brother and other family members have been detained and
are being questioned, according to the AP.
ISIS has claimed
responsibility for the apparent meticulously planned attacks and has warned
that France would remain at the “top of the list of targets” over its airstrike
on the militant group in Syria and Iraq.
A Seat car
containing Kalashnikov rifles was found abandoned by police in Montreuil,
approximately 4 miles east of Paris. Molins said Saturday that gunmen armed
with automatic rifles pulled up in that model car before opening fire, killing
15 people and injuring 10, but a French official told the AP that authorities
couldn’t immediately confirm if it was the same black Seat car linked to the
AK-47 attacks on the Le Carillon bar and the Le Petit Cambodge restaurant on
Rue Alibert in the city’s 10th district.
Belgian police
arrested three in connection with the terror assaults Saturday. Belgium Justice
Minister Koen Geens told the VRT network that the arrests came after a car with
Belgian license plates was seen Friday night close to the Bataclan concert
hall, scene of the deadliest assault, where at least 89 people were massacred
by attackers armed with AK-47s and explosives.
Geens said the car
was a rental and the arrests stemmed from police raids conducted in the St.
Jans Molenbeek neighborhood in Brussels.
French President
Francois Hollande called the attacks an “act of war” in a nationally televised
address Saturday. Hollande vowed France “will be merciless toward the
barbarians of Islamic State group.”
ISIS, in an online
statement, described Paris as "the carrier of the banner of the Cross in
Europe" and described the attackers as "eight brothers wrapped in
explosive belts and armed with machine rifles."
French police said
Saturday they believed all of the attackers were dead, but were still searching
for possible accomplices. The French prosecutor's office said seven of the
eight assailants died in suicide bombings.
Fox News' Greg Palkot and The Associated Press contributed to this
report.
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2015/11/15/one-paris-attacker-reportedly-identified-as-ismael-omar-mostefai/?intcmp=hpbt1
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