2015 Thalys train attack
2015 Thalys train attack | |
---|---|
Location | On board Thalys train n°9364 in Oignies, Pas-de-Calais, France. |
Coordinates | 50°27′57″N 2°58′26″E / 50.46583°N 2.97389°E |
Date | 21 August 2015 17:45 (CEST) |
Attack type | Attempted mass shooting |
Weapons | |
Deaths | 0 |
Injured | 4 (3 directly, including the perpetrator)[Note 1] |
Defenders | Damien A., Mark Moogalian, Spencer Stone, Anthony Sadler, Alek Skarlatos and Chris Norman |
The 2015 Thalys train attack was a shooting and stabbing incident that took place on 21 August 2015 aboard a Thalys train passing through Oignies, Pas-de-Calais, France.[7][8] The train was traveling from Amsterdam to Paris via Brussels when the perpetrator opened fire in a train carriage before being subdued by passengers, one of whom he stabbed. Including the assailant, four people were injured, none fatally.[9] The incident is believed by French police to be an Islamist terrorist attack, although the gunman claimed the motivation was robbery due to hunger.[10][11] Several people who subdued the attacker were awarded France's highest decoration, the Legion of Honour.
Attack
At approximately 17:45 CEST (5:45 p.m.) on 21 August, on Thalys train 9364[12] traveling from Amsterdam to Paris, reportedly a 25-year-old Moroccan man, Ayoub El Khazzani,[13][14][15][16][17] exited the toilets on train car No. 12,[18] shortly after the train had crossed the border from Belgium into France.[19] He was shirtless[20] and armed with an AKM assault rifle,[2] for which he had nine magazines and a total of 270 rounds of ammunition. He was also carrying a pistol and a bottle of petrol.[4][17][21]
A 28-year-old Frenchman, whose name was released only as "Damien A.", was heading to the toilet as the armed gunman was exiting.[14] Damien A. attempted to restrain or disarm the gunman but fell to the floor in the ensuing struggle. An American-born Frenchman, 51-year-old Mark Moogalian,[14] attempted to wrest the rifle from the gunman, who then drew an automatic 9mm Luger pistol.[1][2][22] Moogalian was shot through the back of the neck; seriously injured, he played dead.[14][16][23][24][25] The assailant also tried to fire his rifle, but it jammed.[16]
The gunman was then tackled and subdued by a group of three American friends, two of them off-duty members of the U.S. Armed Forces.[23][26][27] They were identified as 23-year-old Spencer Stone,[28] 23-year-old Anthony Sadler,[29][30] and 22-year-old Alek Skarlatos.[22][31][32][33] Sadler told CNN that Skarlatos yelled "Get him!" after which "Spencer immediately gets up to charge the guy, followed by Alek, then myself."[12] In an interview with Sky News, Skarlatos added that they had been lucky that the attacker's rifle had jammed.[34]
Stone was reportedly the first of the three Americans to attack the gunman and was slashed multiple times while trying to subdue him, sustaining injuries to the hand, head, and neck. Stone put him in a chokehold, holding on though the assailant was cutting him with a box cutter, nearly severing his thumb.[3] Skarlatos seized the assailant's rifle[19] and beat him in the head with its muzzle until the assailant was unconscious.[35] A British passenger, 62-year-old Chris Norman,[36] and a French train driver[36] came to their aid to hold the gunman down. They used Norman's T-shirt to tie his arms behind his back.[15]
The passengers then helped Moogalian, who "had blood pouring from the neck"[36] due to his gunshot wound.[24] Stone, who is a medic,[36] initially tried to wrap his shirt around the wound, despite having an injured hand and cut eye himself. However, he realized it was not going to be effective in stopping the bleeding. Instead, he stuck two of his fingers into Moogalian's wound and pushed down on what he thought was an artery, which stopped the bleeding.[37][38]
The train, which was carrying 554 passengers,[9] was passing Oignies in the Pas-de-Calais department when the attack took place.[39] It was rerouted to the station of nearby Arras. Moogalian was airlifted to the University Hospital in Lille, while Stone was later treated for wounds on his thumb, an eye injury, and other minor wounds.[2] The remaining passengers were all brought to a gym in Arras, where they were searched and had their identity documents checked before being allowed to proceed to Paris.[1]
Suspect
Ayoub El Khazzani[5] (born 3 September 1989,[40] also spelled El-Khazzani and el-Qazzani),[41] a 25-year-old man from Morocco, was identified as the suspected assailant by French and Spanish authorities, he had boarded the train in Brussels.[42] He carried no identification but was identified by his fingerprints. Prior to the attempted attack, he had resided in Aubervilliers, Seine-Saint-Denis, France, since 2014.[43] El Khazzani was originally from Tétouan in northern Morocco,[44] and moved to Spain in 2007, two years after his father had legalized his status there.[45] He was an employee at the mobile phone operator firm Lycamobile for two months in early 2014 before leaving due to not having the right work papers.[46]
El Khazzani was apparently known to French authorities and had been tagged with a "fiche S" (S file or security file), the highest "warning" level for French state security. He had been similarly profiled by Belgian, Spanish, and German[47] authorities. El Khazzani had reportedly lived in the Spanish cities of Madrid and Algeciras[48] from 2007 to March 2014.[49] During his time in Spain, he attracted the attention of authorities after making speeches defending jihad, attending a known radical mosque, and being involved in drug trafficking.[46][47] He then moved to France, at which time the Spanish authorities informed the French of their suspicions.[49] However, French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve claimed that he moved to Belgium first in 2015.[44] He had reportedly spent time between May and July in Syria before moving to France.[13][49][50]
Possible motives
According to prosecutor François Molins, El Khazzani listened to a "YouTube audio file in which the individual exhorted his followers to raise arms and fight in the name of the prophet" and that his Internet browsing history showed "clear evidence of terrorist intent."[51] Prosecutors discovered the files on his phone, which they say he listened to immediately prior to the attack.[4]
Sophie David, a lawyer initially assigned to his case but no longer representing him, said that El Khazzani says he was homeless because his ID was stolen, that he slept in a Brussels park where he found a suitcase containing the rifle and the pistol, and that he had no intention to massacre the passengers but planned to rob them so he could get food. He denies firing a single shot and was said to not have any firearms training.[11][23][52][53] However, authorities said El Khazzani's explanations became less plausible with each questioning and he had eventually stopped talking to investigators.[4][54] On 23 August, Belgian authorities began investigating whether El Khazzani had an accomplice.[55]
Possible source of weapons
French newspaper La Voix du Nord said that the gunman in the Thalys attack may have had connections to groups targeted by the Belgian counter-terror operation, and authorities are currently investigating the link.[49] One of the gunmen in the 2015 Île-de-France attacks had purchased automatic weapons and a rocket launcher from Belgian gangs,[56] allegedly in a black market near Gare du Midi, the station that the gunman in the Thalys attack boarded from.[57][58]
Legal proceedings
Preliminary charges were filed against El Khazzani on 25 August by the Paris prosecutor's office for attempted murder in connection with terrorism, possession of weapons in connection with terrorism, and participation in a terrorism conspiracy. He was remanded into custody.[2][4][59]
Involved passengers
Among the train's passengers, the following were noted by the press for their involvement in the incident:
- Damien A., a 28-year-old Frenchman working as a banker.[14] The first passenger to attempt to tackle the gunman, he wishes to remain anonymous.[60]
- Jean-Hugues Anglade, a 60-year-old French actor, whose hand was cut by breaking glass.[61] He was treated in a hospital in Arras.[62]
- Mark Moogalian, a 51-year-old U.S.-born Frenchman, with dual-nationality,[63] who teaches English at the Sorbonne.[14] He attempted to wrestle the rifle away from the gunman.[14][16][22][23][24] He sustained a non-fatal gunshot injury to the neck that required emergency surgery at Lille.[64]
- Chris Norman, a 62-year-old British businessman living in France.[65] He helped subdue the gunman.[36][66]
- Anthony Sadler,[67] a 23-year-old American student in his senior year at California State University, Sacramento. He is a former high school classmate of Stone and Skarlatos.[29][30] He helped Stone and Skarlatos tackle the suspect.[29]
- Alek Skarlatos, a 22-year-old American Oregon Army National Guard Specialist, on holiday after deployment in Afghanistan. He and Spencer Stone are former neighbors and classmates.[22][31][32][33][67] He struck the suspect with the latter's own weapon.[24]
- Spencer Stone,[67] a 23-year-old American Airman First Class in the US Air Force, who was on leave from the 65th Air Base Group.[28] He sustained several cuts, a fractured finger, and an injury to his right eye, which were treated in a hospital near Lille.[15] He later travelled to a hospital at Ramstein Air Force Base in Germany[68] for additional treatment.[69][70][71]
- An off-duty French train driver, who also helped subdue the gunman.[36] His name has not been released.
On 24 August, Norman, Sadler, Skarlatos, and Stone were made Knights of the Legion of Honour (Chevaliers de la Légion d'honneur) by French president François Hollande.[72][73] Moogalian was also made a Knight of the Legion of Honour on 13 September 2015,[74] with Damian A. expected to be similarly honored at a later date.[72] The uninjured, Norman, Sadler, and Skarlatos were also awarded the medal of the city of Arras.[75][76]
In the US, Sadler will also be awarded the Secretary of Defense Medal for Valor.[77] Skarlatos will be awarded the Soldier's Medal, the highest award for actions not taken in combat,[68] while Stone was awarded the Airman's Medal and the Purple Heart. Stone will also be promoted on 1 November to Staff Sergeant after being regularly promoted to Senior Airman on 1 October.[78]
Reactions
Government reactions
- France: The three Americans and Norman were hailed as "true heroes" by the mayor of Arras, Frédéric Leturque.[23][75] French president François Hollande and Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve praised them for their bravery.[9]
- United Kingdom: British Prime Minister David Cameron praised the "extraordinary courage" of those involved in taking down the attacker, including Briton Chris Norman.[9]
- United States: The White House stated that "the President expressed his profound gratitude for the courage and quick thinking of several passengers, including U.S. service members, who selflessly subdued the attacker... It is clear that their heroic actions may have prevented a far worse tragedy."[12][79] U.S. President Barack Obama called the three Americans on 22 August to personally thank them for their bravery.[80] General Philip M. Breedlove of the U.S. European Command in Stuttgart, Germany, said the three Americans' actions, "clearly illustrate the courage and commitment our young men and women have all the time, whether they are on duty or on leave."[81]
EU collaboration
Koen Geens, the Belgian Minister of Justice called for increased collaboration within the EU on arms trafficking.[82] Geens said "I do not believe that these weapons are of Belgian origin" and "there are far too many illegal Kalashnikovs and [military surplus] arriving in Belgium from Eastern Europe."[83] He called for more effective arms control outside the Schengen zone, and flagged increased police powers against weapons traffickers.[84] On 29 August, ministers from France, the UK, Germany, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and Switzerland met in Paris to discuss train security, including the possibility of using metal detectors for some international train passengers.[85]
Security improvements
In response to the attack, the Belgian government decided to increase patrols of Belgian police at international train stations and to increase baggage checks.[86] Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel called for urgent talks with France, Germany and the Netherlands on increasing security on cross-border trains.[87] The European Commission said that the Schengen treaty is non-negotiable, and that increased security checks cannot include border checks.[88] European Union officials are now considering introducing metal detectors and body scans at all train stations, along with an increase in CCTV cameras inside trains.[89]
Investigations
Three different official investigations have been launched by governmental authorities, one in France, another in Spain, and the third in Belgium.[90][91] In addition, Thalys International has launched their own internal investigation.[92]
French and Spanish investigations
On 21 August, the anti-terrorist section of the French public prosecutor's office in Paris took over the investigation based on "the arms used, the events that unfolded, and the context."[93]
In view of the gravity of the acts he was accused of, the suspect was placed in custody for a period which could be extended to 96 hours. According to the police, based on the modus operandi the attack resembled a terrorist attack.[94]
A Spanish police spokesman said that the suspect's parents' house in Algeciras had been searched.[91]
Belgian investigation
A spokesman for the Belgian Federal Prosecutor's Office announced on 22 August that they had launched an investigation into the attempted attack. They consider that Belgium is involved due to the heavily armed perpetrator having boarded the train at Brussels-South railway station.[90]
Thalys investigation
At the initiative of the French National Railway's President, Guillaume Pepy, an internal investigation was launched by Thalys in order to shed light on the sequence of events during the attack.[92]
On 18 September, Thalys published an internal report about the assault.[95][96]
Controversies
Actions of train crew
Jean-Hugues Anglade, a French actor traveling with his partner and children in the No. 11 car (the last car before the rear engine), was critical of the train crew immediately following the incident. He claimed that crew had locked themselves in the engine car and had not come to the aid of passengers.[citation needed] Anglade told Paris Match that they heard gunshots and screaming in the next car, after which several crew members rushed past them to the engine car, opened it with a special key and locked themselves inside.[citation needed] Anglade, who cut his hand when he broke the glass shielding the hammer used to break the train windows,[citation needed] said he saw the gunman through the door between the cars.
Anglade stated that the dozen passengers in his car were pressed against the engine car door, banging on it and begging the crew to open it: "We shouted for staff to let us in, we were yelling, 'Open up!' in vain.... Nobody responded to us. Not a squeak. This abandonment — so much distress, loneliness — it was terrible and unbearable!"[97] Anglade said that Anthony Sadler came into their car searching for blankets and a first aid kit for the wounded, and told them the assailant had been subdued.[citation needed][98] Sadler also banged on the door of the engine car to no avail, said Anglade, who expressed his gratitude.[citation needed]
Anglade's claims of "abandonment" by the crew were denied by the Thalys corporation.[citation needed] On 23 August, Anglade and his partner met Thalys director Agnès Ogier and SNCF president Guillaume Pepy. In a joint statement released after the meeting, the actor confirmed his testimony and accusations of abandonment, but acknowledged that the two crew members who locked themselves in the engine car with a handful of passengers were not Thalys employees but contractors from a catering company.[99][100][101] In the hours that followed, he blamed the train crew for their attitude,[102] claiming that they had abandoned the passengers to the assailant.[103][104]
On 23 August, Anglade acknowledged that the crew members who "abandoned the passengers", by locking themselves in the engine car, were not Thalys staff, but actually employees of a catering company. He added, "The French conductor and the other Thalys employee present in the coach where the assault took place showed [...] heroic behavior."[105]
Treatment of suspect
On 26 August, El Khazzani's lawyer Me Mani Ayadi denounced the treatment of his client during the latter's transfer to the courthouse. Video shows a handcuffed El Khazzani being walked into the building blindfolded and barefoot. Ayadi said he found it "outrageous and disgraceful" that his client was treated in such a "degrading and inhuman" manner, regardless of the charges filed against him. In response, a French official familiar with the case stated that the authorities followed standard security precautions, which dictate that suspects charged with terrorism and organized crime be blindfolded so they cannot later identify the officials escorting them. The official also said the accused refused to wear the shoes offered to him.[106][107][108]
On 1 September, the French public prosecutor's office issued a warning to television network i>Télé after its 25 August 2015 broadcast showing suspect El Khazzani arriving at the courthouse in handcuffs. It is illegal in France to publish images of people in handcuffs (prior to their conviction) without their consent, due to the presumption of innocence. i>Télé had digitally blurred out El Khazzani's hands, but the prosecutor's office warned the network that this was insufficient, and criminal charges would be brought against it if this reoccurred.[109]
See also
- 2015 anti-terrorism operations in Belgium
- 2015 Copenhagen shootings
- Jewish Museum of Belgium shooting
- Saint-Quentin-Fallavier attack
Notes
- ^ The injured were Moogalian, Stone, El Khazzani, and Anglade (whose injury was indirectly related to the incident). Some early reports claimed others were injured, including Norman and a train conductor, but these were not confirmed by subsequent reports.
References
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{{cite web}}
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The 28-year-old French banker known only as "Damien A" was the first person to tackle the gunman, but does not want to be named
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- ^ Chardon, Frédéric (23 August 2015). "Koen Geens veut lutter contre le trafic d'armes vers la Belgique Koen Geens wants to fight against the trafficking of arms to Belgium". LaLibre.be (in French). Retrieved 25 August 2015.
"Mais il est évident qu'il y a beaucoup trop de kalachnikovs illégales et démilitarisées qui arrivent en Belgique en provenance d'Europe de l'Est", poursuit Koen Geens. ["But it is evident that there are far too many illegal demilitarised Kalashnikovs arriving in Belgium from Eastern Europe", continued Koen Geens.]
- ^ "Attentat déjoué dans un Thalys : le ministre de la Justice avance 4 points d'action pour lutter contre le trafic d'armes [Attack foiled in a Thalys: the Minister of Justice puts forward 4 points of action to fight against arms trafficking]". lavenir.net (in French). 24 August 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
- ^ "France train attack: Europe 'to tighten rail security'". BBC News. 29 August 2015. Retrieved 31 August 2015.
- ^ "Belgium steps up security measures after train attack". News24. 22 August 2015. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
- ^ "Belgium calls on neighbors for more security on cross-border trains". Yahoo! News. 22 August 2015. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
- ^ Firn, David, Buck, Tobias (23 August 2015). "Terror attack on train puts spotlight on Schengen". Financial Times. Retrieved 24 August 2015.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Hughes, Chris (25 August 2015). "French train shooting: Gunman in bare feet with bandaged eyes in court appearance". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
- ^ a b "Attaque dans un Thalys: le parquet fédéral ouvre une enquête" [Attack On Board the Thalys: Federal Prosecutor's Office Launches Investigation]. Le Soir.be (in French). Le Soir. 22 August 2015. Archived from the original on 3 September 2015. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
- ^ a b "Spanish police search family house of Moroccan detained in France for high-speed train attack". FOX News. 1 September 2015. Retrieved 5 September 2015.
- ^ a b Ogier, Agnes; Pepy, Guillaume (23 August 2015). "Déclaration conjointe J-Hugues Anglade et sa compagne" [Joint Declaration of J-Huges Anglade and Companion] (PDF). Thalys.com (in French). Thalys Press Service. Retrieved 6 September 2015.
- ^ M. M.; C. Bq; Belga; AFP (23 August 2015). "Attaque dans un Thalys: le suspect prétend qu'il voulait braquer le train" [Attack on the Thalys Train: Suspect Claims He Only Wanted to Rob the Train]. Le Soir.be (in French). Le Soir. Archived from the original on 6 September 2015. Retrieved 6 September 2015.
- ^ Newmark, Zack (21 August 2015). "Three hurt in Amsterdam-to-Paris train "terrorist attack"". NlTimes.nl. Archived from the original on 21 August 2015. Retrieved 6 September 2015.
{{cite web}}
:|archive-date=
/|archive-url=
timestamp mismatch; 22 August 2015 suggested (help) - ^ "Internal report of Thalys" (PDF). Thalys (in Dutch). 18 September 2015. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ^ "Internal report of Thalys" (PDF). Thalys (in French). 18 September 2015. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ^ Paris Match and RTBF TV
- ^ http://www.cnn.com/2015/08/22/europe/france-train-shooting-heroes/
- ^ Jérôme Béglé (25 August 2015). "Jean-Hugues Anglade : l'indécence !" [Jean-Hugues Anglade: The Outrage!]. LePoint.fr. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
- ^ "Coups de feu dans un Thalys" [Shots Fired on the Thalys]. LeJdd.fr. 21 August 2015. Retrieved 28 August 2015.
Actor Jean-Hugues Anglade was slightly injured also, the actor's family confirmed to RTL. His hand was hurt after having broken the glass cover protecting the hammer used for breaking out the train windows.
. - ^ Duquesne, Laurent (26 August 2015). "I Was on the Thalys Train During the Attack: What I Saw and What I Did". HuffingtonPost.com. Archived from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 5 September 2015.
Jean-Hugues Anglade headed toward the end of car number 11 and broke the safety glass of a box that stores a hammer used for breaking the window panes on the train during emergencies.
- ^ "Attaque du Thalys : Jean-Hugues Anglade a cru mourir et raconte... »" [Attack on the Thays: Jean-Hugues Anglade Thought "We were about to die" and Tells his Story]. purepeople.com. 22 August 2015. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
Anglade accuses the SNCF of not coming to the aid of the passengers. 'We shouted, "Open up!" We wanted them to react. In vain... Nobody answered. Radio silence... For us, it was inhuman... I protected my children using my body, telling them over and over, 'It's going to be all right, it's going to be all right.'
. - ^ "Personnel du Thalys : Jean-Hugues Anglade maintient ses accusations" [Jean-Hugues Anglade Maintains His Accusations]. nouvelobs.com. 23 August 2015. Retrieved 23 August 2015.
[Anglade] stuck to his version of the facts stating that the train crew had 'totally ignored' the passengers in his car. ... [and that] some crew members shut themselves into the engine car and refused to open the door to protect the passengers.
. - ^ "Jean-Hugues Anglade : "Ça sentait la mort"" [Jean-Hugues Anglade: "It felt like death was nigh"]. LeFigaro.fr. 22 August 2015. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
According to [Anglade] the Thalys crew took cover without even warning the passengers of any danger.
. - ^ "Thalys : Jean-Hugues Anglade nuance ses propos". Le Figaro (in French). 24 August 2015. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Thalys : polémique autour de la diffusion d'images d'Ayoub El-Khazzani menotté" [Thalys: Controversy over Publication of Images of Ayoub El-Khazzani in Handcuffs]. Le Monde. 26 August 2015. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
- ^ "Thalys : yeux bandés, pieds nus... l'arrivée du suspect à Paris est-elle légale?" [Thalys: blindfolded, barefoot... Was the Arrival of the Suspect in Paris Legal?]. Metronews. 25 August 2015. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
- ^ "Thalys : l'avocat d'El Khazzani dénonce "un traitement inhumain"" [Thalys: Attorney for Khazzani denounces 'Inhumane Treatment']. Le Point. 26 August 2015. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
- ^ "Le parquet de Paris met en garde i-Télé pour avoir montré Ayoub El-Khazzani menotté" [Paris Prosecutor's Office Issues Warning to i-Télé for Showing El-Khazzani in Handcuffs]. Le Monde. 1 September 2015. Retrieved 16 September 2015.