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Sunday, May 19 2013
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France fears new serial killer after four murders near Paris

AFP

EVRY FEARS grew on Friday that a serial killer was stalking housing estates in the suburbs of Paris, where the same weapon has been used to murder four apparently innocent citizens since November.

The latest killing on Thursday of a 47-year-old mother, shot dead near her home in the Essonne suburb, prompted Interior Minister Claude Gueant to vow every effort was being made to find the killer.

All the victims were shot with the same small-calibre 7.65 mm weapon by a gunman who fled on a motorbike, recalling the methods of an Islamist extremist killed by police in southern France in March after murdering seven people.

While nothing suggests any political or religious motives in the shootings, police are probing any possible links with several other homicides in a 10-kilometre (six-mile) radius of the southern outer suburbs.

“That is a concern, but in any case, as in every criminal inquiry, we are putting every effort into finding out who is behind this,” Gueant told Europe 1 radio.

A source close to the inquiry told AFP that ballistics analysis had shown that the same weapon had been used in all four attacks.

On Thursday, a woman of Algerian origin was shot dead in the foyer of her apartment block, part of a working-class housing estate in the Grande- Borne district of Grigny, south of the capital.

She was a widow who worked at Orly Airport and lived with her 18-year-old son.

“Everyone is in shock,” said one of her neighbours, who asked not to be named. “She didn’t feel threatened. She’s a normal person, simple, no history.”She died in hospital after being shot with the small-calibre weapon, which is not widely used by the criminal milieu as it must be fired at relatively close range to be effective.

The first victim was a 35- year-old laboratory assistant who was also shot dead in her building in Grigny on November 27.

A man who said he was her ex-boyfriend turned himself in, was arrested and charged, but has since withdrawn his confession.

On February 22, one of the first victim’s neighbours, a 52-year-old man, was shot dead in their building’s car park. Then, on March 19, an 81-year-old man was killed by a shot to the head with a weapon of the same calibre in the entrance to a similar block of flats in Grigny’s neighbouring suburb of Ris- Orangis.

Gueant noted the man arrested in connection with the first killing who was in jail during the latest attack.

“That said, this series is worthy of all our attention and we have put all our means at our disposal behind it,” Gueant said.

Last month, the southern city of Toulouse was shocked by a string of seven killings by Mohamed Merah, a 23-yearold Frenchman from an Algerian family who declared himself to be a supporter of the Al Qaeda militant network.

Merah killed three off-duty paratroopers, three Jewish schoolchildren and a trainee rabbi before he was cornered in his apartment and killed in a shootout with police.


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