France will mobilise up to 7,000 soldiers to increase security around the country after a teacher was fatally stabbed and three other people wounded in a school attack by a former student suspected of Islamic radicalisation, the president’s office said.
Some children and personnel returned to the Gambetta-Carnot school in the northern city of Arras as it reopened on Saturday morning, after a school-day attack on Friday that rattled France in a context of global tensions over the Israel-Hamas war.
Counter-terrorism authorities are investigating the stabbing, and the suspected assailant and several others are in custody, prosecutors said.
The suspect had been under recent surveillance by intelligence services for radicalisation.
Court documents viewed by the Associated Press show he is from the Ingushetia region in Russia’s Caucasus Mountains, which neighbours Chechnya. Authorities had initially identified him as Chechen.
The French government heightened the national threat alert, and French president Emmanuel Macron ordered up to 7,000 soldiers deployed by Monday night and until further notice to bolster security and vigilance around France, his office said.
The “Attack Emergency” threat posture allows the government to temporarily mobilise the military to protect public places among other measures.
At the school on Saturday morning, police stood guard as adults and children trickled in.
Classes were cancelled, but the school reopened for those who wanted to come together or seek support.
One mother said she came with her 17-year-old daughter in a show of defiance against extremism, and to overcome the fear of returning to a site where children were locked down for hours after the stabbing.
Another mother came to seek guidance from counsellors about how to support her two sons, who witnessed the attack in their schoolyard.
“As adults, we are managing with difficulty to take a step back, but for them, they’re children,” said Emily Noge, arriving at the school with her sons and partner.
“They initially thought it was an exercise, so keeping things separate, to say that we’ve passed from an exercise to something dramatic, is very tricky for them.
“It’s always the same moments that come back: The schoolyard, the chairs to protect themselves, the stabbings, the whys. ‘Why us? Why Arras? Why the teachers? They were good teachers. They were there to protect us.”
The suspect in the week’s attack had been under surveillance since the summer on suspicion of Islamic radicalisation, French intelligence services told the Associated Press.
He was detained on Thursday for questioning based on the monitoring of his phone calls in recent days, but investigators found no sign that he was preparing an attack, interior minister Gerald Darmanin said.
French intelligence suggested a link between the war in the Middle East and the suspect’s decision to attack, the minister said.
He said authorities have detained 12 people near schools or places of worship since the Hamas attack on Israel, some of whom were armed and were preparing to act. France has heightened security at hundreds of Jewish sites around the country this week.
The person killed in the attack was Dominique Bernard, a French language teacher at the Gambetta-Carnot school, which enrols students aged 11-18.
Another teacher and a security guard were in a critical condition with wounds from the stabbing, police said. The counter-terrorism prosecutor said a cleaning worker was also injured.
Announcing that the school would reopen on Saturday, Mr Macron urged the people of France to “stay united”.
“The choice has been made not to give in to terror,” he said. “We must not let anything divide us, and we must remember that schools and the transmission of knowledge are at the heart of this fight against ignorance.”