Louvre attacker refuses to speak during probe

Louvre attacker refuses to speak during probe
A picture of Abdullah El-Hamahmy displayed on a phone at the family home in Mansura, Egypt. (AFP)
Updated 05 February 2017
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Louvre attacker refuses to speak during probe

Louvre attacker refuses to speak during probe

PARIS/CAIRO: The machete-wielding attacker who was shot by a soldier outside France’s Louvre museum refused to answer investigators on Sunday after being formally placed into custody at a hospital, a source at the Paris prosecutor’s office said.
Abdullah Al-Hamahmy, an Egyptian, was shot several times on Friday after attacking soldiers in what French President Francois Hollande described as a terrorist attack.
“The first interview took place this morning, but it turned out to be a short one. For the moment, he refuses to talk to investigators,” the source at the prosecutor’s office said.
Hamahmy’s father told Reuters it was “nonsense” to suggest his son was a terrorist, saying that the youngest of four children was a law graduate who had been working in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) for about five years and was in Paris on business.
The 29-year-old arrived in France on Jan. 26 after obtaining a tourist visa in Dubai. Egyptian security officials have not said whether he had any known links to militant groups.
Hours before the Louvre attack, an entry on Hamahmy’s Twitter account was posted reading: “Why are they afraid of the establishment of an Islamic state? Because the country of Islam will defend its resources and territory and the honor and dignity of Muslims.”
Reuters could not independently verify the authenticity of the tweet and the account has since been shut down.
The incident underlined the militant threat facing France, which is still under a state of emergency as presidential elections loom following a series of attacks over the past two years that have killed more than 230 people.
Hamahmy’s father, Reda Al-Refaai, in an interview on Saturday accused French officials of fabricating the allegations against his son to excuse the force used to stop him.
Asked if his son had shown militant tendencies, the retired police major general said: “If he had I would have thrown him out of the house.”
French investigators are hunting for clues to establish whether he acted alone, on impulse, or on orders from someone. He attacked troops checking bags near the museum’s shopping mall with a machete in each hand, wounding one soldier.
Hamahmy’s father said he last spoke to his son a few hours before the attack and that they had discussed what color hat Hamahmy should buy to protect him against the cold weather of Paris.