Monday, November 23, 2015

France Muslim Workplace Violence Gas Factory Attack

France Muslim Workplace Violence Gas Factory Attack ---

see main: Terrorist Attack On American Gas Factory in France ---

Sometimes a workplace violence incident is could also be terrorist attack if the suspect is Arab or Muslim and appears to have some connection with a radical militant movement. In the United States such incidents are always officially attributed to mental illness and any connection to any terrorist motive is whitewashed and covered up.


Saint-Quentin-Fallavier attack

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Saint-Quentin-Fallavier attack
Part of the Islamic terrorism crisis in France
Vue Saint-Quentin-Fallavier depuis Château de Fallavier 3.jpg
The industrial estate is to the right of this image showing the town.
Isère-Position.svg
Location of Isère within France
LocationSaint-Quentin-FallavierIsère, France
Coordinates45.6428°N 5.1250°ECoordinates45.6428°N 5.1250°E
Date26 June 2015
09:30 CEST (UTC+02:00)
Attack type
Beheadingvehicle ramming,bombingterrorism
WeaponsKnifeVan
Deaths1
Non-fatal injuries
2
PerpetratorsAQMI Flag.svg ISIS
AssailantYassin Salhi
A terrorist attack took place on 26 June 2015 in Saint-Quentin-Fallavier when a French Muslim of North African descent, Yassine Salhi, decapitated his employer Hervé Cornara and drove his van into gas cylinders at a gas factory in Saint-Quentin-Fallavier near Lyon, France, which caused an explosion that injured two other people. Salhi was arrested and charged with murder and attempted murder linked to terrorism. Three other people were questioned by the police but released without charge.
The attack occurred on the same day as several other Islamist terrorist attacks, which have subsequently been named the 2015 Ramadan attacks, though any relationship between the various incidents is disputed. French authorities believe that Salhi has links with the Islamist terrorist group, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). The attack occurred during heightened public fears over Islamist attacks in France, a few months after the Île-de-France attacks in January 2015, including the Charlie Hebdo shooting.

Attack[edit]

At around 09:30 CEST (07:30 UTC) on 26 June 2015, Yassine Salhi, a delivery driver, gained entrance to the grounds of an Air Products factory in Saint-Quentin-Fallavier near the city of Lyon. He was driving a van with his dead 54-year-old former boss, Hervé Cornara, inside it.[1] He had tricked Cornara into getting into the van earlier that day, after which Salhi knocked him unconscious and strangled him. He then decapitated Cornara just before reaching the factory. Salhi had made regular visits to the factory, so he was known to employees at the site.[2][3]
He placed Cornara's decapitated head on a fence railing and planted two Jihadist flag banners alongside it. The head had a cloth thrown over it with the Shahada written on it: "There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is his prophet." The headless body and a knife were found on the ground nearby. Salhi attempted to blow up the factory by ramming several gas cylinders, causing an explosion.[4][5][6][7] Two other people were injured in the process. Video surveillance footage showed that the perpetrator also tried to open canisters containing flammable chemicals before being subdued minutes later.[8][9][10] He shouted "Allahu Akhbar" as he met and was overpowered by firefighters responding to the scene.[11] The perpetrator had also photographed himself with the slain victim and sent the image to at least one other person via WhatsApp to a French man who joined ISIL.[1][12]

Perpetrator[edit]

Yassin Salhi
BornMarch 25, 1980 (age 35)
Pontarlier, France
OccupationDelivery driver
Criminal chargeMurderattempted murder,terrorism. destruction by means of an explosive device
Spouse(s)Married
Children3
Yassin Salhi (born 25 March 1980[13]) was reported as the primary attacker, although he may not have acted alone. French police opened a file on Salhi in 2006, over suspected links with a radicalSalafist group, but it was not renewed in 2008. In 2012, he was involved in an anti-Semitic attack on a Jewish teenager; the attack took place on a train travelling from Toulouse to Lyon.[14][15] At the time of the 2015 attack, he was believed to be living in Saint-PriestLyon, with his wife and three children.
Six years prior to the attack, Salhi spent a year in Syria with his wife and children, claiming he was there to learn Arabic. At the time of the attack, Salhi was also in regular contact with the French jihadist Sebastian Yunis, known to have left for Syria to join ISIS. Salhi claims his reason for the attack was solely based on personal motives, saying a fight with his employer who fired him as well as a dispute with his wife pushed him to do it. French authorities have linked him to the terrorist group ISIS.[2]
Salhi's mother was Moroccan and his father, who died when Salhi was 16, was Algerian. Salhi grew up in Pontarlier, where he was tutored in Arabic by Amar Remimi, treasurer of the Philippe Grenier mosque association. In the mid-2000s, Salhi met and was radicalized by Frédéric Jean Salvi, who had served time at the nearby prison in Besançon until 2001. Salvi himself had converted to Islam while in prison, where he then become known as "Grand Ali". Salvi attended the same mosque in Pontarlier as Salhi, where he at one point was expelled for challenging the imam during a sermon.[16] A coworker at the transport company, Abdel Karim, stated that Salhi had once asked him his opinion of Daesh. After hearing Karim's opinion, Salhi would no longer speak with him other than to say hello and goodbye.[3]
Salhi was fired in June for incorrectly dropping equipment from a pallet, according to his lawyer, and claimed he attacked his former boss for personal reasons.[17]
On 30 June, Salhi was charged with murder and attempted murder linked to terrorism, as well as destruction by means of an explosive substance.[18]

Related arrests[edit]

Another man was arrested hours after the attack at his home in Saint-Quentin-Fallavier. He was believed to be driving around the factory in aFord Fusion car before the attack in a suspected reconnaissance attempt.[19][20] On 26 June, he was released without charge.[20]
Salhi's wife and sister were also arrested later that day.[7][12] They were released without charge two days later.[21] Earlier, his wife gave a radio interview, in which she denied the alleged terror links to the family.[22]

Victim[edit]

The decapitated victim was identified as Hervé Cornara, the 54-year-old manager of a transport company based in Chassieu, about 20 miles from the attack. He had employed Salhi as a delivery truck driver starting in March[23] and fired him in June.[17]

Air Products[edit]

The company Air Products is a United States chemical company based in AllentownPennsylvania. Its president and CEO since July 2014, Seifi Ghasemi, is an Iranian-born Shia Muslim. In April 2015 the company won a contract to build, own and operate the world's largest industrial gas complex in JazanSaudi Arabia. Air Products officials said security had been increased at its operations around the world as a precautionary measure. The company has facilities in more than 50 countries employing more than 21,000 people.[24][25][26]

Domestic reaction[edit]

The President of FranceFrançois Hollande, left an EU summit in Brussels to return to France. Hollande said, "The attack bears the hallmarks of a terrorist attack."[19] The French Minister of the InteriorBernard Cazeneuve, was also reported to be traveling to the scene.[6][27]

Other Islamist attacks[edit]

The attack in Saint-Quentin-Fallavier was one of five Islamist attacks that took place on the same day around the world, including in Tunisia,KuwaitSomalia, and Syria. These attacks came three days after an audio message by ISIS senior leader Abu Mohammad al-Adnani was released that encouraged militant sympathizers to attack one year after ISIS declared themselves a state, during the month of Ramadan.[28]

See also[edit]


References[edit]

^ Jump up to:a b "France attack suspect admits killing, police make link to Syria". Reuters. 29 June 2015.
^ Jump up to:a b "France links beheading, gas plant attack to Islamic State".Yahoo News.
^ Jump up to:a b "French terror suspect 'mysterious and calm'". skynews.com.au. Retrieved 28 June 2015.
Jump up^ "Beheading And Blast Reported At French Factory". Sky News.
Jump up^ "Attentat en Isère : suivez la situation en direct". Le Monde.fr.
^ Jump up to:a b "France beheading attack: 'Man decapitated' near Lyon". BBC News.
^ Jump up to:a b "Man decapitated in terror attack in France". The Local.
Jump up^ "CCTV Footage of France Terrorist Attack reveals much about the Assailant". news.biharprabha.com. Ventuno. 27 June 2015. Retrieved27 June 2015.
Jump up^ "French Authorities Hold Suspect in Beheading and Explosion at Chemical Plant". The New York Times. 26 June 2015. Retrieved27 June 2015.
Jump up^ LaGrange, Catherine (26 June 2015). "Decapitated body, daubed with Arabic, found at French attack site". Reuters. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
Jump up^ "French Islamist attack: Wife of suspect Yassin Salhi describes shock after outrage". Retrieved 28 June 2015.
^ Jump up to:a b "France terror suspect took selfie with beheaded victim". CBS News. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
Jump up^ "Yassin Salhi né en mars 1980)". L'inter Naute.
Jump up^ "Suspected terror attack at French factory". The Guardian.
Jump up^ "French court hands suspended sentence to man who attacked Jew on train". Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
Jump up^ Rubin, Alissa J. (27 June 2015). "Suspect in Attack in France Had Ties to Radical Islamist". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 28 June 2015.
^ Jump up to:a b "France links beheading, gas plant attack to Islamic State".Brampton Guardian (Brampton, Ontario). 30 June 2015. Retrieved26 July 2015.
Jump up^ "Attentat en Isère : Yassin Salhi mis en examen pour assassinat en relation avec une entreprise terroriste". Le Monde (in French).
^ Jump up to:a b Matthew Weaver. "Suspected terror attack at French factory – live updates". The Guardian.
^ Jump up to:a b "Grenoble attack: Man found beheaded and Islamist flag raised above factory in France". The Telegraph.
Jump up^ "Attentat en Isère : les intentions floues de Yassin Salhi". France Info (in French).
Jump up^ "Wife of France Terror Attack Perpetrator says they are ordinary Muslim Family". news.biharprabha.com. 27 June 2015. Retrieved 27 June2015.
Jump up^ "French terror suspect took selfie with beheaded victim". France 24.Agence France-Presse (AFP). 27 June 2015. Retrieved 16 August 2015.
Jump up^ Siddique, Haroon. "Air Products: the US firm targeted by suspected Islamists in France". the Guardian. Retrieved 28 June 2015.
Jump up^ "Air Products: The firm targeted in suspected terrorist attack in France". Los Angeles Times. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved 28 June2015.
Jump up^ "Seifi Ghasemi". airproducts.com. Retrieved 28 June 2015.
Jump up^ "Decapitated body found in attack on factory in France". The Guardian.
Jump up^ "Terror attacks: Dozens dead in vicious day as Isis marks one year of caliphate". International Business Times UK.

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