An attacker killed up to 80 people and injured scores when
he drove a heavy truck at high speed into a crowd watching Bastille Day
fireworks in the French Riviera city of Nice late on Thursday, officials said. Counter-terrorist investigators were seeking to identify the
driver, who a local government official said opened fire before police shot him
dead. The official said weapons and grenades were found inside the 25-tonne,
unmarked truck.
The attack, which came eight months and a day after Islamic
State gunmen and suicide bombers killed 130 people in Paris, appeared so far to
be the work of a lone assailant.
Newspaper Nice-Matin quoted unidentified sources as saying
the driver was a 31-year-old local of Tunisian origin.
The truck careered for hundreds of metres (yards) along the
famed Promenade des Anglais seafront, slamming into spectators watching the
fireworks, listening to an orchestra or strolling above the beach towards the
grand, century-old Hotel Negresco.
"It's a scene of horror," a local member of parliament,
Eric Ciotti, told France Info radio, saying the truck had "mown down
several hundred people." Local government leader Christian Estrosi put the
death toll at 77, while BFM TV later put it at 80. An Interior Ministry
spokesman said "several dozen" had died.
Nice-Matin said 42 people were in critical condition and
many others injured.
"People went down like ninepins," Jacques, who
runs Le Queenie restaurant on the seafront, told France Info.
"I saw people go down," bystander Franck Sidoli,
who was visibly shocked, told Reuters at the scene. "Then the truck
stopped, we were just five metres away. A woman was there, she lost her son.
Her son was on the ground, bleeding,"
Nice-Matin posted photographs of the truck, its windshield
starred by a score of bullets and its radiator grille destroyed.
Since the Islamic State attacks last year, major public
events in France have been guarded by troops and armed police, but it appeared
to have taken some minutes to halt the progress of the deadly truck as it tore
along pavements and a pedestrian zone.
Police told residents of the city, located 30 km (20 miles)
from the Italian border, to stay indoors as they conducted further operations,
though there was no sign of any other attack.
President Francois Hollande, who raced back to Paris from
the south of France after the attack, was due to address a sleepless nation on
television at 3:30 a.m. (0130 GMT). Hours earlier, in a traditional Bastille
Day interview, he had said an eight-month state of emergency might end in two
weeks time.
Islamic State militants killed 130 people in Paris on Nov.
13, the bloodiest in a number of attacks in France and Belgium in the past two
years. On Sunday, a weary nation had breathed a collective sigh of relief as
the month-long Euro 2016 soccer tournament across France ended without a feared
attack.
Four months ago, Belgian Islamists linked to the Paris
attackers killed 32 people in Brussels.
Police denied rumours on social media of a subsequent
hostage-taking in Nice. Vehicle attacks have been used by isolated members of
militant groups in recent years, notably in Israel, as well as in Europe,
though never to such devastating effect.
U.S. President Barack Obama said in a statement: "On
behalf of the American people, I condemn in the strongest terms what appears to
be a horrific terrorist attack in Nice, France, which killed and wounded dozens
of innocent civilians."
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