Toulouse police shoot and wound man who held four hostage in bank

TOULOUSE – French police shot and wounded a man claiming to be a member of al-Qaeda yesterday after he took four hostages in …

TOULOUSE – French police shot and wounded a man claiming to be a member of al-Qaeda yesterday after he took four hostages in a bank in the south-western city of Toulouse, prosecutor Michel Valet said.

The hostage-taker, known by police to have a record of psychological problems, was shot after he emerged from the bank with one hostage, prompting him to return inside for shelter, police sources said.

Elite police units then stormed the bank and arrested him, freeing the last two of the four hostages he had taken after an almost seven-hour standoff.

“The man was overpowered . . . he has two significant injuries one on the left hand and the other on the right thigh,” Mr Valet said.

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The man (26) had earlier released two female hostages after receiving food and water in the early afternoon. All four hostages were in good health, Mr Valet said.

The man took the hostages, who included the bank manager, in a branch of CIC bank at about mid-morning. He had fired two rubber bullets from his gun earlier in the day, Mr Valet said.

“His demands were muddled. We have elements to make us think that we are dealing with someone who was suffering from serious psychological troubles and this act was linked to that. It is difficult to say what made him do this given his religious claims were poorly defined.”

It was the latest drama to hit the Toulouse region after a young al- Qaeda-inspired gunman shot dead three soldiers, a rabbi and three Jewish children in March.

The hostage-taker had asked for the elite Raid commando unit to come to the scene – the same squad that shot dead gunman Mohammed Merah (23) in March after a long standoff at his home, which was just metres from the site of yesterday’s siege.

“By choosing to carry this out where the Merah affair took place, it shows that this makes sense for him and has a particular symbolism,” said Christophe Caupenne, a former commando at the Raid unit. “The Merah affair was a psychological trigger for him so at some point he would act.”– (Reuters)