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Montpellier Attack: Armed Man on Run after Killing Woman

Montpellier Attack: Armed Man on Run after Killing Woman
folder_openEurope... access_time7 years ago
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Local Editor

A gunman is on the run in France after killing a woman in an attack on a retirement home for Catholic missionaries near the city of Montpellier.

Montpellier Attack: Armed Man on Run after Killing Woman

Armed police were deployed to the Maison de Retraite des Missions Africaines [African Missions Retirement Home] in Montferrier-sur-Lez on Thursday night.

"An individual, who was masked and armed with a knife and a sawn-off shotgun came into the retirement home where 70 missionaries live," a source told the AFP news agency, adding that the man's motivations were unknown.

Local authorities confirmed at least one person had been found dead, with the e-Metropolitain news website reporting a female supervisor had been killed with a knife after she raised the alarm.

The woman's body was reportedly found bound and gagged, while the attacker's whereabouts remained unclear as searches continued.

"For the time being, there is only one victim," Montpellier prosecutor Christophe Barret said. "For the moment there is no particular evidence about the motive for this crime."

The assault was launched at around 9.45pm local time [8.45pm GMT], at the home run for both religious and non-religious residents.

Around 60 residents have since been rescued by police but the assailant was believed to have fled. Road blocks were set up in the surrounding area, with officers searching cars as a helicopter searched overhead.

"A large number of security forces, firefighters and ambulance personnel are at the scene," said the mayor of Montferrier-sur-Luz, Michel Fraysse.

Alain Berthet, a local councilor in Montferrier-sur-Luz, said the home's residents were "very elderly with an average age of 75 although some are more than 90," with many needing assistance to walk.

News of the killing was reverberating round France late on Thursday night, with people voicing their horror on social media.

The secretary general of the French Bishops' Conference, Olivier Ribadeau Dumas, wrote on Twitter: "Our prayers tonight go to the woman who lost her life in this attack on a retirement home."

Suspicions quickly turned to terrorism just months after Daesh [ISIS/ISIL] supporters murdered a Catholic priest in an assault on a church in Normandy.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Thursday's incident.

France remains under a state of emergency imposed following the murder of 130 people in the Paris attacks last November.

Several terror plots have since been uncovered, including plans by Daesh terrorists to attack Disneyland Paris and the Champs Elysees.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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