Tag: France

  • ‘Martyr of the A10’: DNA ends up in France arrests over 1987 murder

    Police and a prosecutor present a leaflet to the media with a picture of the girl and a message reading Image copyright AFP Symbol caption Police re-opened the case in 2012 with a choice for witnesses

    French police have arrested a pair 31 years after their daughter used to be found dead, in a chilly case revived thru DNA evidence.

    The mutilated body of the girl, who was once unidentified, used to be found through the side of a toll road in significant France in 1987.

    The folks were traced after the DNA of their son, tested in an unrelated case, used to be matched with that of the girl, French media document.

    they are to be wondered by way of a pass judgement on on Thursday and will face murder charges.

    The folks have not been known but are believed to be in their 60s. Police haven’t commented officially on reviews of the arrests, which are said to have taken position on Tuesday.

    Symbol copyright AFP Image caption the lady was buried in an unmarked grave near the location where the frame was found

    The body was found in a ditch alongside the A10 toll road near the city of Blois in August 1987. The government were unable to identify her and she or he was believed to be between three and 5 years vintage at the time of her death.

    the girl bore marks of horrific, long-status abuse, similar to broken bones and burns with an iron. Parts of her body were mutilated.

    She was nicknamed the “little martyr of the A10”, and buried in an nameless grave.

    are we able to nonetheless rely on DNA sampling? The detectives who hunt cold case killers

    The case baffled police for many years. It was reopened in 2012 while a decision for witnesses was released with a picture of the useless woman’s face and the caption: “who’s she?”

    the lady was defined as having a blue checked shirt, curly black hair and a “Mediterranean (possibly North African) sort”.

    The obvious step forward took place last yr, while a man was once arrested over a violent incident.

    His DNA reportedly identified him because the victim’s brother. Months of research then led police to the oldsters.

    Other outstanding circumstances revived way to DNA proof include:

    A former police officer arrested in April and accused of being the “Golden State killer” who performed a string of rapes and murders within the US within the nineteen seventies and 80s The homicide conviction in 2016 of an Italian man known via DNA samples as the killer of 13-year-antique Yara Gambirasio six years in advance

  • Italy, France attempt to patch up migrant row; draw papal rebuke – The Globe and Mail

    Ecu neighbours Italy and France tried to patch up a row over immigration on Thursday as Pope Francis recommended politicians all over the place to work together on helping refugees and respect their dignity.

    Italy summoned France ’s envoy on Wednesday and demanded an apology from President Emmanuel Macron, who had said Rome ’s transfer to dam a migrant rescue send from its ports was once an act of “cynicism and irresponsibility”.

    Macron, in a overdue Wednesday phone call with Italian Top Minister Giuseppe Conte, stated he did not mean to offend “Italy and the Italian people”, consistent with a statement.

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    the 2 leaders confirmed a lunch meeting on Friday to speak about “new initiatives” on immigration, a day after Italian Inside Minister Matteo Salvini announced an “axis” with Germany and Austria to struggle illegal migration.

    “France does not need escalation; it ’s counter productive. we want to keep up discussion,” a supply just about Macron said because the president visited the western the town of Rochefort. Alternatively, the supply brought that Macron was not “taking back anything else”.

    Salvini has vowed to proceed to dam overseas humanitarian boats from Italian ports as Europe wrestles with find out how to proportion the responsibility of handling migrants seeking to input the european from battle zones and negative nations, largely throughout Africa and the middle East.

    More Than 1.8 million migrants have arrived in Europe considering the fact that 2014, and Italy is now sheltering greater than ONE HUNDRED SEVENTY,000 asylum seekers, besides as an anticipated 500,000 unregistered migrants. A European Union summit will discuss the bloc ’s asylum laws at the finish of the month.

    Pope Francis, who has made the defence of refugees a plank of his papacy, rebuked politicians for now not respecting the consideration of migrants and demanded “a metamorphosis in mindset”.

    Talking at a convention on migration at the Vatican, the pope said international locations will have to interact and “move from making an allowance for others as threats to our convenience to valuing them as individuals whose existence enjoy and values can contribute greatly to the enrichment of our society”.

    AQUARIUS

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    The row focused at the charity send Aquarius, which both Italy and Malta refused to let dock at their ports. It used to be sporting 629 migrants and is heading to Spain, which has presented safe harbour, escorted via Italian ships.

    Now the migrants are suffering from sea illness because of tough prerequisites, according to Docs without boundaries, certainly one of the charities that runs the Aquarius.

    Ropes have been strung across the send to make it more straightforward to walk on deck, video from the Aquarius confirmed. a few of the migrants are ladies and small children who’re not anticipated to disembark earlier than Saturday night time. They had been rescued off the coast of Libya remaining week.

    Regardless Of grievance from the pope and the U.N. refugee agency, which called the remedy of the migrants on the Aquarius “shameful”, Salvini has no longer modified his position.

    “Ships belonging to overseas organisations and flying international flags can’t dictate Italy ’s immigration policy,” Salvini, who also heads the anti-immigrant League birthday celebration, stated on Wednesday.

    A U.S. Military send that recovered 41 survivors and 12 bodies after a shipwreck on Tuesday used to be nonetheless looking forward to Italy to come to a decision what to do with them.

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    A Dutch-flagged humanitarian ship, the ocean Watch THREE, had offered to take them on board, but no longer with no written be sure that it’ll be allowed to dock in an Italian port, which it has no longer received.

    The U.S. ship, the Trenton, was pressured to drop the 12 our bodies again within the sea as it did not have a place to retailer them, los angeles Repubblica Web Page said. A U.S. navy spokeswoman didn’t instantly respond to a request for affirmation.

    “The wait was too long,” Flavio Di Giacomo, a spokesman for the World Group for Migration, said on Twitter. “With Out refrigerated garage, the rescuers have been forced to desert the cadavers at sea. A dramatic gesture.”

  • Emmanuel Macron, French president, in U.S. to visit Donald Trump

    Behind the pomp and circumstance of French President Emmanuel Macron’s visit to Washington starting Monday — including President Trump’s first state dinner for a fellow world leader since taking offi

    Behind the pomp and circumstance of French President Emmanuel Macron’s visit to Washington starting Monday — including President Trump’s first state dinner for a fellow world leader since taking office — lies a calculated and hard-nosed campaign to position Paris as the White House’s best friend in Europe.

    Much is riding on the visit by Mr. Macron, the banker and political neophyte who captured the French presidency last year, topped by the fate of the Iran nuclear deal that Mr. Trump is poised to kill next month and that Mr. Macron desperately hopes to save.

    The three-day visit will be a high-profile test of Mr. Macron’s studied charm offensive with the unpredictable American president, weighing whether the young leader can parlay his personal rapport with Mr. Trump into White House moderation on issues such as the Iran deal and Washington’s new skepticism over such internationalist causes as climate change and free trade.

    With German Chancellor Angela Merkel coming to Washington at the end of the week, European leaders will get their last best chance to persuade Mr. Trump to change his mind, or at least hold his fire as EU capitals try to devise new penalties for Tehran that could keep Washington in the deal.

    Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, on a visit to New York, increased the pressure on Mr. Macron Sunday by saying Washington’s withdrawal from the pact would only further diminish the U.S. standing among its allies and adversaries alike.

    Iran is ready to restart its nuclear program if the Trump administration leaves the 2015 nuclear agreement and reinstates sanctions, Mr. Zarif said.

    “We have put a number of options for ourselves, and those options are ready, including options that would involve resuming at a much greater speed our nuclear activities,” he added.

    Mr. Macron has unexpectedly emerged as one of the more moderate and accepting voices within the European Union concerning some of Mr. Trump’s unorthodox foreign policy stances.

    The 40-year-old French president has repeatedly defended Mr. Trump’s credibility on the world stage from criticism on several fronts, including his immigration ban from several Muslim countries, claims that Washington is abandoning its role as defender of the postwar liberal order, and views that he is creating a vacuum that China and Russia are filling.

    Other Western European leaders have struggled to get a read on Mr. Trump or even establish a personal working rapport, but the young English-speaking Mr. Macron has proved more deft.

    “I am not going to judge what should be your president, or to consider that because of these controversies or because of these investigations your president is less credible,” Mr. Macron told The Associated Press, dismissing any attempt to be drawn into the fierce U.S. controversy over Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election.

    But Mr. Macron will be under intense scrutiny back home to prove that his personal bonhomie with Mr. Trump translates into policy successes, starting with the May 12 deadline under which Mr. Trump must decide whether to stay in the multilateral Iran nuclear deal.

    Policy payoffs

    Although the visit will undoubtedly include all the trappings of a high-level diplomatic visit between two longtime allies, political observers in the U.S. and Europe will be keeping a keen eye on how the leaders interact over several issues on which they have found themselves at odds.

    The two leaders are certain to discuss the impacts of Mr. Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris climate accord, which France has championed but the Trump administration argues unnecessarily regulates American industries and international companies. Mr. Macron is also a champion of free trade, while Mr. Trump has questioned the North American Free Trade Agreement, killed an Asian trade deal and put in deep freeze a proposed free trade accord with the European Union.

    But no topic will likely loom as large between the two leaders as Washington’s reported desire to withdraw from the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran that the Obama administration strongly supported.

    Mr. Trump and his national security team, led by newly installed National Security Adviser John R. Bolton, have repeatedly called for the dissolution of the nuclear deal despite the continuing support of other world powers, including Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China.

    If Mr. Trump effectively withdraws from the deal, the U.S. will reimpose sanctions that Iran says negate the main purpose of the accord.

    Proponents of the pact, including Mr. Macron and Ms. Merkel, say there is no tangible proof that Tehran has failed to comply with the nonproliferation elements of the Iran deal, even if Iran continues to test other military systems and remains a destabilizing force for American allies across the Middle East.

    More pointedly, Mr. Macron is expected to argue that the U.S. and its Western allies will have no good option to restrain Iran’s nuclear programs if Mr. Trump takes Washington out of the deal.

    French officials warn there is “no plan B” if the Iran deal collapses. Mr. Macron himself asked on Fox News, “What do you have as an alternative?”

    Iran’s Mr. Zarif said Sunday that the Bolton appointment showed Mr. Trump would rather overthrow the government in Tehran that negotiate with it.

    The U.S. “never abandoned the idea of regime change in Iran,” he said, adding that some are just “more explicit about stating it.”

    France, Germany, the United Kingdom and other key European allies say the deal is the best chance the West has to keep Iran from becoming a nuclear power, potentially threatening the U.S. and Israel with an atomic attack. A furious negotiation is underway to see if the Europeans can formulate a new set of sanctions and penalties for Tehran outside of the nuclear deal to persuade Washington to stay in it.

    Mr. Macron, who treated Mr. Trump to an envy-inducing military parade and a dinner in the Eiffel Tower during his trip to Paris last year, has shown a talent for gestures that impress the billionaire former real estate developer.

    The French president plans to present Mr. Trump with an oak tree sapling from the site of one of the first World War I battles involving American troops, the Battle of Belleau Wood, The Associated Press reported Sunday.

    It’s a sign of appreciation for the sacrifices America has made for France — and a subtle nod to Mr. Macron’s environmental agenda.

    He wants it planted in the White House gardens.

    • This article is based in part on wire service reports.

  • Donald Trump, Emmanuel Macron state visit to focus on Iran nuclear deal

    President Trump welcomed French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday for the administration’s first state visit, cementing the close alliance between the two countries with a whirlwind of events that i

    President Trump welcomed French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday for the administration’s first state visit, cementing the close alliance between the two countries with a whirlwind of events that include a Marine One helicopter tour of Washington and a private dinner at Mount Vernon.

    On the business side of visit, Mr. Trump and Mr. Macron will broach trade and military issues, including the touchy subject of the Iran nuclear deal in which the two men take opposite views.

    Mr. Trump wants to scuttle the Obama-era agreement with Iran, and he could move to withdraw the U.S. as soon as next month. Mr. Macron has urged Mr. Trump to reconsider.

    “The president has been extremely clear that he thinks it is a bad deal. That certainly hasn’t changed,” said White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders.

    Still, she said the president would listen to arguments for how the deal could be improved to benefit the American people.

    In New York City on Monday, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said it’s up to the European signatories of the nuclear deal to convince President Trump not to exit the controversial accord.

    “It is either all or nothing,” Mr. Zarif tweeted. “European leaders should encourage Trump not just to stay in the nuclear deal, but more important to begin implementing his part of the bargain in good faith.”

    Mr. Zarif’s comments followed vows from other Iranian officials to “shred” the nuclear agreement if Washington withdraws.

    On Tuesday night, Mr. Trump and first lady Melania Trump will host the French president and his wife, Bridgette Macron, at his presidency’s first state dinner. The main course will be rack of spring lamb, and the entertainment will be a performance by the Washington National Opera from the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, according to the White House.

    “This visit will celebrate the long and enduring friendship between France and the U.S.,” said Mrs. Sanders.

    Mr. Trump waited longer than many of his predecessors to host a state visit. He is the first president since Calvin Coolidge in the 1920s to finish his first year in office without one.

    Although they appear to be political opposites, Mr. Trump and Mr. Macron made fast friends when they met at a NATO summit. The bond grew stronger when Mr. Macron hosted Mr. Trump in Paris for Bastille Day.

    “They are not such an odd couple when you scratch the surface,” said Michael C. Desch, director of the Notre Dame International Security Center.

    He referred to Mr. Trump as a Francophile.

    “At least in terms of the pomp and circumstance of French governmental ceremonies. Remember that it was at a Bastille Day parade that the president got the idea for a military parade here,” said Mr. Desch. “Also, they share a surprising number of similarities, both personal, both political outsiders and businessmen, to substantive: Syria and the war on ISIS.”

    For the state dinner, Mr. Trump broke with tradition by not inviting journalists or any Democratic members of Congress.

    He also is hosting a smaller gathering than the White House soirees thrown by his predecessor.

    Mr. Trump has about 150 guests on the list. The guests at President Obama’s state dinners numbered in the hundreds, which required a huge tent on the South Lawn because there wasn’t a room large enough inside the White House to accommodate so many people.

    Mr. Obama’s first state dinner was for Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and featured vegetarian food. The event was marred by party crashers Michaele and Tareq Salahi, winemakers from Virginia who were angling for a spot on the reality TV show “Real Housewives of D.C.”

    The couple’s ability to crash the state dinner, including getting photos with Vice President Joseph R. Biden, prompted a Secret Service security review and led to the resignation of White House social secretary Desiree Rogers.

    Mr. Obama and President Clinton held their first state dinners in November of their first year in office. President George W. Bush had his in September of his first year.

    In their eight years as president, Mr. Obama and Mr. Bush hosted 13 state dinners. Mr. Clinton threw 28 state dinners.

    Mrs. Trump, who is responsible for organizing nearly every detail of the visit and the grand state dinner, has spent months planning events for the Macrons’ three-day visit to the capital.

    “The menu will be a showcase of the best of America’s cuisines and traditions, with nuances of French influences prepared by the renowned White House Executive Chef, Christeta Comerford,” the White House said in a statement outlining details of the state visit and dinner.

    The first course at the state dinner will be goat cheese gateau, tomato jam, buttermilk biscuit crumbles and young variegated lettuces. The main course includes rack of spring lamb, burnt cipollini soubise and Carolina gold rice jambalaya.

    Dessert will be nectarine tart and creme fraiche ice cream.

    “The wines were selected to complement the menu and embody the historic friendship between the United States and France, which dates back to the American Revolution,” said the White House.

    Mr. Trump does not drink alcohol, but Mr. Macron, who has a reputation for following a strict diet, is known to drink wine for lunch and dinner.

    The wines for the state dinner include Domaine Serene Chardonnay Evenstad Reserve from 2015, which is the product of American and French collaboration. The wine was aged in 40 percent French oak barrels for more than 12 months, according to the White House.

  • Donald Trump goes all out for first state visit, will welcome Emmanuel Macron

    President Trump’s first state visit will welcome French President Emmanuel Macron with pomp and grandeur including a traditional review of U.S. troops, a diner showcasing the “best of American cuisine

    President Trump’s first state visit will welcome French President Emmanuel Macron with pomp and grandeur including a traditional review of U.S. troops, a diner showcasing the “best of American cuisines” and a performance by the Washington National Opera, the White House said Monday.

    First lady Melania Trump, whose office organized the grand affair, released details of the visit by Mr. Macron and his wife Brigitte Macron for three days of events that include a state dinner Tuesday.

    “First Lady Melania Trump and President Donald J. Trump are excited to welcome President Emmanuel Macron and Mrs. Brigitte Macron of France for the Trump Administration’s first state visit,” the White House said.

    Mr. Trump is the first president since Calvin Coolidge in the 1920s to not host a state visit during his first year in office. The week’s events, however, are designed to make up for any lost time.

    The visit kicks off Monday with the president and first lady welcoming the Macrons with a tree-planting ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House.

    Monday evening, the two couples will depart the White House on the presidential helicopter Marine One, for a scenic tour of historic monuments in Washington, ending at Mount Vernon — the iconic home of America’s first president, George Washington.

    The White House released details of Tuesday’s events:

    Arrival Ceremony:

    On Tuesday Morning, April 24, the President and First Lady will host the State Arrival Ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House. With the practice tracing back to the 17th century, the Trump Administration is proud to carry on the traditional military arrival ceremony. Nearly 500 members of the United States Armed Forces from all five military branches will be on the South Lawn for the traditional “Review of the Troops.” Guests invited to attend the ceremony include Cabinet Secretaries, Members of Congress, military families, and students from the Maya Angelou French Immersion School in Temple Hills, Maryland.

    State Dinner:

    The color scheme is cream and gold and the china settings consist of the Clinton china for the baseplate, along with both Bush (43) and Clinton china for the dinner service. The First Lady chose the Bush china with the green color palette to complement the spring green and white flowers that will be featured in the State Dining Room. Mrs. Trump has also selected pieces from the extensive Vermeil collection as well as American Silver from the White House Collection — from Tiffany & Co. and S. Kirk & Sons — to add to the décor in the State Dining Room.

    Entertainment:

    Washington National Opera from the John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts.

    Floral Arrangements:

    The Cross Hall will feature over 1,200 branches of cherry blossom, all grown in the United States.

    The State Dining Room will feature more than 2,500 stems of white sweet peas and nearly 1,000 stems of white lilac — both California and Dutch grown mixed.

    The parlors will feature a variety of mixed garden flowers. The Stephanotis vines, which will also be featured in the parlors, are from California.

    The Menu:

    The menu will be a showcase of the best of America’s cuisines and traditions, with nuances of French influences prepared by the renowned White House Executive Chef, Christeta Comerford.

    The first course celebrates the wondrous first harvest of spring, using greens from the White House kitchen garden.

    The main course will be a Rack of Spring Lamb and Carolina Gold Rice Jambalaya, which will be cooked in a New Orleans tradition and scented with the trinity of Cajun cooking — celery, peppers, and onions, and spiced with herbs from the South Lawn.

    Dessert will be a Nectarine Tart infused with White House honey and accented by crème fraîche ice cream.

    Wines:

    The wines were selected to complement the menu and embody the historic friendship between the United States and France, which dates back to the American Revolution.

    The Domaine Serene Chardonnay “Evenstad Reserve” 2015 is the product of American and French collaboration — a combination of French plants from Dijon that thrive in the volcanic Oregon soil and colder temperatures. The wine was aged in 40 percent French oak barrels for more than 12 months.

    The Domaine Drouhin Pinot Noir “Laurène” 2014 — This wine uses the motto “French soul–Oregon soil.” The grapes at Domaine Drouhin are harvested and sorted by hand and fermented in French Oak barrels.

    Schramsberg Demi-Sec “Crémant” has been served in the White House for official and ceremonial events many times over the years. The subtle sweetness and creamy effervescence of the 2014 vintage is the perfect accompaniment for a nectarine tart.

  • The Latest: Macron, Trump plant tree together at White House

    The Latest on the state visit by President Emmanuel Macron of France (all times local):

    WASHINGTON (AP) – The Latest on the state visit by President Emmanuel Macron of France (all times local):

    6 p.m.

    President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron have ceremonially planted a tree together on the South Lawn of the White House as they kick off the first state visit of the Trump presidency.

    Holding brass shovels, the two leaders threw dirt onto the newly installed tree, a European Sessile Oak from Belleau Woods, where thousands of U.S. Marines died in a 1918 battle during World War I.

    Trump told reporters on Monday that France is “a very special country,” adding, “I love the tree.”

    Trump, Macron and their wives are taking Marine One from the White House to George Washington’s Mount Vernon for a private dinner Monday ahead of a formal day of business events Tuesday.

    ___

    5:35 p.m.

    French President Emmanuel Macron has arrived at the White House at the start of his meetings with President Donald Trump.

    Macron and his wife, Brigitte, were embraced by the president and first lady Melania Trump when their car pulled into the West Wing driveway Monday. The handshakes and pleasantries kicked off Macron’s state visit to Washington with Trump.

    The Macrons took an unscheduled walk along Pennsylvania Avenue earlier in the day.

    The two planned to present the Trumps with a tree on the South Lawn of the White House and then were flying aboard Marine One for dinner at Mount Vernon, George Washington’s historic riverside home.

    ___

    2:40 p.m.

    French President Emmanuel Macron is taking a stroll around the White House before he is set to kick off his state visit to Washington with President Donald Trump Monday evening.

    Macron says in a Monday afternoon tweet: “Before our first work meetings, let’s have a walk on Washington’s streets.”

    Moments earlier, Secret Service officers and agents rushed to keep up with his entourage as Macron departed Blair House for an unscheduled walk, greeting well-wishers along Pennsylvania Avenue. Macron is joined by his wife, Brigitte Macron, on the walk.

    The Macrons are being received by Trump and First Lady Melania Trump at the White House later Monday, before flying aboard Marine One for dinner at Mount Vernon. Following business meetings Tuesday morning, Macron will be the guest of honor at the Trump’s first State Dinner Tuesday evening at the White House.

    ___

    1:55 p.m.

    President Emmanuel Macron of France has arrived on a state visit to the United States. It’s the first such visit of President Donald Trump’s administration.

    Macron said after his plane landed Monday at a U.S. military base near Washington that he and Trump will discuss issues important to their countries.

    Macron calls the visit a “great honor.” It’s his first trip to Washington since his election last year.

    Trump and first lady Melania Trump are taking Macron and his wife, Brigitte, to dinner Monday at Mount Vernon, George Washington’s home along the Potomac River.

    On Tuesday at the White House, Macron will be treated to a military arrival ceremony, Oval Office time with Trump, a joint news conference and a glitzy state dinner with nearly 150 guests.

    ___

    12:05 p.m.

    Melania Trump is serving rack of lamb and nectarine tart at Tuesday’s White House state dinner for President Emmanuel Macron of France.

    It’s the first state dinner of President Donald Trump’s administration.

    The first lady also chose the Washington National Opera to entertain the approximately 150 guests after dinner.

    Mrs. Trump’s office on Monday released details of the affair being planned to dazzle Macron and his wife, Brigitte. House Speaker Paul Ryan, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards are among those who have said they are attending.

    The first lady has saved a few choice details for the last minute. They include the full guest list and what she’s wearing.

  • French hero officer who swapped himself for hostage dies

    A French police officer who offered himself up to an Islamic extremist gunman in exchange for a hostage has died, raising the death toll in the attack in southern France to four. He was honored Saturd

    TREBES, France (AP) — A French police officer who offered himself up to an Islamic extremist gunman in exchange for a hostage has died, raising the death toll in the attack in southern France to four. He was honored Saturday as a national hero of “exceptional courage and selflessness.”

    Lt. Col. Arnaud Beltrame, 44, was among the first officers to respond to the attack Friday on the supermarket in the southern French town of Trebes.

    Beltrame, who joined the elite police special forces in 2003 and served in Iraq in 2005, had organized a training session in the Aude region in December for just such a hostage situation. At the time, he armed his officers with paintball guns, according to the Depeche du Midi newspaper.

    “We want to be as close to real conditions as possible,” he said then.

    But when he went inside the supermarket, he gave up his own weapon and volunteered himself in exchange for a female hostage.

    Unbeknownst to the Morocco-born hostage-taker, he left his cellphone on so police outside could hear what was happening in the store. They stormed the building when they heard gunshots, officials said. Beltrame was fatally wounded.

    In addition to the four people killed by the gunman in his rampage Friday, the attacker was killed by police. Fifteen others were injured.

    “Arnaud Beltrame died in the service of the nation to which he had already given so much,” President Emmanuel Macron said. “In giving his life to end the deadly plan of a jihadi terrorist, he fell as a hero.”

    French police and soldiers have been a prime target of attacks by extremists, with 10 killed in recent years, including Beltrame. Other victims include three soldiers killed near Toulouse in 2012, three police officers shot to death in 2015, a police couple killed in their home in 2016 and a police officer killed on Paris‘ Champs-Elysees in 2017. Dozens of others have been wounded.

    According to Macron’s statement, Beltrame also served as a member of the presidential guard and in 2012 earned one of France’s highest honors, the Order of Merit. He was married with no children.

    Cedric Beltrame told RTL radio Saturday that his brother died “a hero.”

    “He was well aware he had almost no chance. He was very aware of what he was doing,” Cedric Beltrame said.

    Beltrame’s mother told RTL radio that, for her son, “to defend the homeland” was “his reason to live.”

    “He would have said to me, ‘I’m doing my job, Mom, nothing more,’” she said.

    People were placing flowers in front of the Gendarmerie headquarters in the French medieval city of Carcassone to pay tribute to Lt. Col. Beltrame. Flags at all gendarmeries were ordered to fly at half-staff.

    Macron says investigators will focus on establishing how the gunman, identified by prosecutors as Morocco-born Redouane Lakdim, 25, got his weapon and how he became radicalized.

    On Friday night, authorities searched a car and the apartment complex in central Carcassonne where Lakdim was believed to live. Two people were detained over alleged links with a terrorist enterprise, one woman close to Lakdim and a friend of his, a 17-year-old male, Paris prosecutor’s office said.

    Lakdim was known to police for petty crime and drug dealing. But he was also under surveillance and since 2014 was on the so-called Fiche S list, a government register of individuals suspected of being radicalized but who have yet to perform acts of terrorism.

    Despite this, Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said there was “no warning sign” that Lakdim would carry out an attack.

    The four-hour drama began at 10:13 a.m. when Lakdim hijacked a car near Carcassonne, killing one person in the car and wounding the other, the prosecutor said.

    Lakdim then fired six shots at police officers on their way back from jogging near Carcassonne, hitting one in the shoulder, said Yves Lefebvre of the SGP Police-FO police union.

    Lakdim then went to a Super U supermarket in nearby Trebes, 60 miles (100 kilometers) southeast of Toulouse, shooting and killing two people in the market and taking hostages. He shouted “Allahu akbar!” — the Arabic phrase for God is great — and said he was a “soldier of the Islamic State” as he entered the Super U, where about 50 people were inside, Molins said.

    Special police units converged on the scene while authorities blocked roads.

    “We heard an explosion — well, several explosions,” shopper Christian Guibbert told reporters. “I saw a man lying on the floor and another person, very agitated, who had a gun in one hand and a knife in the other.”

    Guibbert said he put his wife, sister-in-law and other shoppers in the meat locker for safety.

    The manager of the supermarket, who would identify herself only by her first name, Samia, was in her office when she heard the shots.

    “Call the gendarmes,” she told her employees. “There’s a terrorist in the store.”

    She said she helped evacuate as many people as possible.

    “It was terrifying,” Samia said.

    During the standoff, Lakdim requested the release of Salah Abdeslam, the sole surviving assailant of the Nov. 13, 2015, attacks in Paris that left 130 people dead. The interior minister suggested, however, that Abdeslam’s release wasn’t a key motive for the attack.

    The IS-linked Aamaq news agency said the attacker was responding to the group’s calls to target countries in the U.S.-led coalition carrying out airstrikes against IS militants in Syria and Iraq since 2014. France has been repeatedly targeted because of its participation.

    France has been on high alert since a series of extremist attacks in 2015 and 2016 that killed more than 200 people.

    ___

    Associated Press journalists Elaine Ganley. Thomas Adamson, Samuel Petrequin, Sylvie Corbet, Angela Charlton and Jerome Pugmire contributed to this report from Paris.

    ___

    This story has been corrected to show dead policeman’s rank was Lt. Col., not Col. An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that the Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the attack. The IS-linked Aamaq news agency said the attacker was responding to the group’s calls to target countries in the U.S.-led coalition carrying out airstrikes against IS militants.