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World / Americas

French train attacker ‘went to Syria’

Published: 23 Aug 2015 - 12:00 am | Last Updated: 01 Nov 2021 - 11:04 am
Peninsula

US serviceman Spencer Stone waves as he departs the Clinique Lille Sud, which specialises in hand injuries, in Lesquin, France, yesterday.

 

Arras: A suspected jihadist gunman overpowered by passengers on a packed Amsterdam-Paris train had visited Syria and was known to both French and Spanish intelligence services, officials said yesterday.
The suspect, identified as a 25-year-old Moroccan, was wrestled to the floor by three American passengers after opening fire with an assault rifle on a high-speed train on Friday evening, and is now being interrogated by counter-terrorist officials near Paris. 
A Spanish counter-terrorism source said he lived in Spain until last year before travelling to war-torn Syria from France. French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve confirmed Spanish intelligence services had flagged the man to France “due to his membership of the radical Islamist movement”.
Armed with a Kalashnikov assault rifle, an automatic pistol, nine cartridge clips and a box-cutter, the attacker opened fire on board the high-speed train just after it crossed from Belgium into northern France on Friday evening. But the attack was quickly stopped when two off-duty US servicemen and their friend charged the gunman and overpowered him.
“I looked back and saw a guy enter with a Kalashnikov. My friends and I got down and then I said ‘Let’s get him’,” Alek Skarlatos, a 22-year-old member of the National Guard in Oregon who recently returned from Afghanistan, told France’s BFMTV.
Spencer Stone, who serves in the US Air Force, was first to the gunman who slashed him in the neck and almost sliced off his thumb with a box-cutter. “At that point I showed up and grabbed the gun from him and basically started beating him in the head until he fell unconscious,” said Skarlatos.
A British business consultant, 62-year-old Chris Norman, also assisted in subduing the man, and said he thought his gun may have malfunctioned.  “I don’t know why he didn’t manage to fire but I think it’s because his weapon jammed,” he told reporters in Arras.
“My first reaction was to hide but... my thought was I’m probably going to die anyway, I’d rather die being active, trying to get him down than simply sit in the corner and be shot. I don’t feel like a hero. If it wasn’t for Spencer, I think we would all be dead.” 
He said Stone had taken the gunman in a chokehold and Norman took his right arm to stop him reaching his gun. With the man floored, Skarlatos left to search for more gunmen, while Norman helped tie up the attacker with his tie.
Despite his own injuries, Stone then went to help man who had been shot in the shoulder. Both were later hospitalised but are said to be recovering well. The train heroes are to be received by President Francois Hollande at the Elysee Palace in the coming days and have won praise from US President Barack Obama and Prime Minister David Cameron.
Mobile phone footage from inside the train shows the suspect, a skinny man wearing white trousers and no shirt, flattened on the floor of the train with his hands and feet tied behind his back. He was arrested when the train stopped at Arras station in northern France. 
The third American, Anthony Sadler, said it had been a “crazy experience”.  “I’m just a college student,” he said. “I came to see my friends for my first trip to Europe and we stop a terrorist. It’s kind of crazy.”
Security is now expected to be tightened on international train services in mainland Europe. While passengers on Eurostar services between Paris and London must pass through airport-style security before boarding trains, passengers on services between Paris, Brussels and Amsterdam face no such checks.
AFP