PARIS — A French soldier was stabbed in the throat in a busy
commercial district outside Paris on Saturday, and the government said it was
trying to determine if there were any links to the brutal killing of a British
soldier by suspected Islamic extremists.
French President Francois Hollande said the identity of the
attacker, who escaped, was unknown and cautioned against jumping to conclusions
about the assault on the uniformed soldier in the La Defense shopping area. The
life of the 23-year-old soldier was not in danger, the Interior Ministry said
in a statement.
On Wednesday, British soldier Lee Rigby, 25, was viciously
stabbed on a London street in broad daylight in a suspected terrorist attack
that has raised fears of potential copycat strikes.
The French soldier was on a group patrol as part of a
national protection program when he was attacked from behind, prosecutor Robert
Gelli told Europe 1 radio. The assailant did not say a word, Gelli said.
"There are elements — the sudden violence of the attack
— that could lead one to believe there might be a comparison with what happened
in London," Interior Minister Manuel Valls told France 2 television.
"But at this point, honestly, let us be prudent."
Rigby was attacked while walking outside the Royal Artillery
Barracks in the Woolwich area of south London.
The gruesome scene was recorded on witnesses' cellphones,
and a video emerged in which one of the two suspects — his hands bloodied —
boasted of their exploits and warned of more violence as the soldier lay on the
ground. Holding bloody knives and a meat cleaver, the suspects waited for
police, who shot them in the legs, witnesses said.
In the video, one of the suspects declared, "We swear
by almighty Allah we will never stop fighting you ... We must fight them as
they fight us."
Two Muslim hard-liners have identified that suspect as
Michael Adebolajo, a Christian who converted to Islam and attended several
London demonstrations organized by banned British radical group al-Muhajiroun.
French security forces have been on heightened alert since
their country launched a military intervention in the African nation of Mali in
January to regain territory seized by Islamic radicals. British Prime Minister
David Cameron was himself in Paris meeting with Hollande when he first received
word of the London attack.
Last year, three French paratroopers were killed by a man
police described as a French-born Islamic extremist who then went on to strike
a Jewish school in the south of France, killing four more people.
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