French mosque stabbing suspect remains at large after killing Muslim worshipper

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LA GRAND COMBE, France (AP) — A man suspected of killing a Muslim worshipper in a mosque in the south of France was still on the run Sunday, authorities said, in an attack described by Prime Minister Francois Bayrou as Islamophobic.

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This article was published 27/04/2025 (227 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

LA GRAND COMBE, France (AP) — A man suspected of killing a Muslim worshipper in a mosque in the south of France was still on the run Sunday, authorities said, in an attack described by Prime Minister Francois Bayrou as Islamophobic.

Both men were alone in the mosque in the former mining town of La Grand Combe on Friday when the victim was fatally stabbed. The assailant recorded the attack on his phone, and security camera footage showed him shouting insults at “Allah,” which means God in Arabic, local media said.

Local prosecutor Abdelkrim Grini said Sunday that investigators are taking into account “the possibility that this was an Islamophobic act. It’s the one we’re working on first, but it’s not the only one,” he said.

“Racism and hatred based on religion will never have a place in France,” French President Emmanuel Macron said. “Religious freedom is inviolable.”

Grini said images of the stabbing he watched as part of the investigation were “horrifying” and that police forces were working non-stop to try and arrest the suspect, with 70 investigators deployed.

“We’re being particularly vigilant to make sure he doesn’t claim any more victims,” Grini said. He added that the suspect is a man born in France in 2004, who lived in the area and did not have a criminal record.

The Grand Mosque of Paris condemned the attack in a statement and said the victim, a young man identified only as Aboubakar in French media, had just finished cleaning the mosque when he was killed.

It called on authorities to quickly shed light on the reasons behind the attack, asking judicial authorities to say whether it is being treated as a “terrorist” act and to note its “scale and seriousness … for the safety of all.”

Justice Minister Gerald Darmanin called the stabbing a “despicable murder” that “wounds the hearts of all believers, of all Muslims in France.”

Bayrou also denounced an act of “Islamophobic ignominy displayed on video.”

“We stand shoulder to shoulder with the victim’s family and the shocked worshippers,” he said. “The resources of the state are being mobilised to ensure that the murderer is caught and punished.”

The SOS Racisme campaign group joined the calls for more clarity in the investigation and took part in a march organized later Sunday at La Grand Combe in support of the victim. Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau traveled to the nearby town of Ales to meet with local Muslim faith officials and pledged to stop the suspect.

“Of course, the possibility of an anti-Muslim act is not at all neglected, quite the contrary,” he said. “It is out of the question to tolerate this kind of act in this hyper-violent society.”

In Paris, a rally against Islamophobia and in tribute to the victim was held at the Place de la République.

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