A man who threatened to blow up a synagogue in Cannes has been detained in France.
In France, police have detained a man who threatened to buy explosives and blow up a synagogue in Cannes on social media. This was announced on November 17 by the mayor of the city, David Lisnar, on his page on the social network X (former. Twitter).
Linsar accompanied the publication of a video from social networks in which a resident of a neighboring city from Cannes threatens to stage a terrorist attack in a synagogue. He stated that he would buy 10 kg of C4 explosive in Marseille and set off an explosion.
"I immediately informed the police and inform you that the mentioned person, a resident of a neighboring town, has just been detained," Lisnar wrote.
He added that the suspect is in custody. Neither the identity nor the motives of the man are disclosed. Linsard expressed gratitude to the French police for their promptness in apprehending the defendant.
On November 8, the newspaper Le Figaro reported that the French special services had detained three women who were about to carry out a terrorist attack in a cultural institution in Paris. The women were detained by officers of the General Directorate of Internal Security (DGSI) of France in early October in Vierzon, Lyon and its suburb of Villerban after several months of surveillance, the material says. It is specified that they are 18, 19 and 21 years old.
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