The
regional Pas-de-Calais authority said the suspected assailant,
who also wounded a second teacher and a school security guard in
the attack, was arrested.
The suspect was a Russian-born Chechen and former student of the
Lycee Gambetta high school where the attack happened, a police
source said. He was on a watchlist of people known as a
potential security risk in connection to radical Islamism, the
police source added.
Police could not confirm local media reports that he shouted "Allahu
Akbar". BFM TV reported he was about 20 years old.
"We're all in a state of shock," said philosophy teacher Martin
Doussaut, who was chased down by the attacker but managed to
escape unharmed after locking himself down in a room.
BFM TV also said the person killed was a French language
teacher, while a sports teacher was stabbed and injured.
Pupils were confined to their classrooms, it added.
President Emmanuel Macron was heading to Arras, his office said.
In a televised address to the nation on Thursday, Macron urged
the French to remain united and refrain from bringing the
Israel-Hamas conflict home.
Nothing so far pointed to a link with events in Israel and the
Gaza Strip, a second police source told Reuters.
The suspected assailant's brother was also arrested.
La Voix du Nord newspaper said that pupils in all schools in
Arras - a town in the desindustrialised, ethnically diverse
northern corner of France - were being held in their classrooms
for their own safety.
France has been targeted by series of Islamist attacks over the
years, the worst being a simultaneous assault by gunmen and
suicide bombers on entertainment venues and cafes in Paris in
November 2015.
In 2020, a teacher, Samuel Paty, was beheaded by a Chechen
teenager who wanted to avenge his use of cartoons mocking the
Prophet Mohammad during a class on freedom of expression.
(Reporting by Layli Foroudi, Michel Rose, Charlotte Van
Campenhout, Tassilo Hummel, Benoit van Overstraeten; Writing by
Ingrid Melander; editing by Richard Lough and Deborah
Kyvrikosaios)
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