Paris - One day after five sticks of dynamite were planted
in a large Paris department store, French Interior Minister Michele
Alliot-Marie on Wednesday announced a series of measures intended to
increase public security.
Parking regulations will be made stricter around department stores
and airports, and customers in large stores and passengers at
airports could be searched more often, Alliot-Marie said.
In addition, more police officers will be deployed in Paris and
other large cities, with about 2,200 more police in the streets than
usual over the Christmas period, she said.
Alliot-Marie also said that the investigation into who had planted
the dynamite in the Printemps department store on the posh Boulevard
Haussmann on Tuesday was progressing swiftly.
'All the trails are open,' she said, 'but some are less credible
than others.'
Earlier Wednesday, Defence Minister Herve Morin said that an
examination of the letter in which a group calling itself the
Revolutionary Front for Afghanistan claimed to have planted the
dynamite seemed to exclude that Islamic terrorists were responsible.
Morin told RTL radio that the use of the words 'revolutionary' and
'capitalist' and the absence of any religious phrases in the letter
suggested other possibilities, such as political extremists.
The writer of the letter threatened to plant more bombs unless
France pulled its troops out of Afghanistan. There are currently some
3,400 French troops involved in the regional conflict against the
Taliban, 2,800 of them stationed in Afghanistan.
The five sticks of dynamite were not connected and lacked a fuse,
and could therefore not be detonated. Alliot-Marie said the dynamite
was old and could be found on many construction sites.
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