Premium
This is an archive article published on December 17, 2008

Dynamite found in top Paris store

Police found explosives in a Paris department store on Tuesday after a tip-off from a group demanding the withdrawal of French troops from Afghanistan.

.

Police found explosives in a Paris department store on Tuesday after a tip-off from a group demanding the withdrawal of French troops from Afghanistan.

The group called itself the Afghan Revolutionary Front and was not previously known to the security services.

The five sticks of gelatine were not primed and police said there was no danger of a detonation.

The tip-off was sent by letter to a French news agency, warning that several bombs had been planted in the Printemps department store on the Boulevard Haussmann, which is normally packed with Christmas shoppers at this time of year.

Police said there was no mention of Islam in the letter, adding that recent attacks in Europe tied to Iraq and Afghanistan had been launched without specific prior warning.

The letter, posted from Paris on December 15, said one of the devices was in the cistern of a lavatory on the third floor of the store, but did not say where the other bombs were hidden.

Police said their searches had uncovered explosives in lavatories on the third and second floor of the men8217;s section of the huge Printemps store.

Story continues below this ad

The explosives had not been primed which indicates there was no risk of explosion, said Interior Minister Michele Alliot-Marie, adding that the material was relatively old.

France has more than 2,600 troops stationed in Afghanistan fighting Taliban forces. Last month, a militant group warned in a video aired on Al Arabia television that it would attack Paris if the French soldiers were not repatriated.

Ten French soldiers were killed in a Taliban attack in Afghanistan in August and a further two died there last month after a mine exploded.

France was hit by bomb attacks against stores, markets and underground metro stations several times during the 1980s and 1990s, with Algerian or West Asian militants often claiming responsibility.

Story continues below this ad

Since the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States and France8217;s participation in the US-led war in Afghanistan, security officials have repeatedly said the country faced potential terrorist attacks.

The discovery of the explosives came at a particularly bad time for the French retail sector, which notches up a major chunk of its annual profits during pre-Christmas trading but is facing a downturn this year because of the financial crisis.

 

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement