Man shot dead after French synagogue set on fire

Paul Kirby,BBC News
CHRISTOPHE PETIT TESSON/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock Rabbi of Rouen Chmouel Lubecki inspects the damage inside the synagogue after a man was shot by police while attempting to set it on fire, in Rouen, northern France, 17 May 2024CHRISTOPHE PETIT TESSON/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
Rabbi Shmouel Lubecki said it was important for Jews not to let antisemites win

French police have killed a man after a synagogue was set on fire in the north-western city of Rouen.

The man was armed with a knife and a metallic tool and was shot after he threatened officers, the Rouen prosecutor said.

Rouen Mayor Nicolas Mayer-Rossignol said the attack on the synagogue did not just affect the Jewish community, but the entire city was "battered and in shock".

French reports say the suspect was Algerian and was appealing against an order to leave France.

Police were called at around 06:45 (04:45 GMT) after smoke was seen rising from the synagogue. The attacker climbed on a large waste bin and threw a petrol bomb through a small window, setting the synagogue alight.

Two police officers reached the scene fast, after the man was spotted on security cameras. The suspect was on the roof of the synagogue when they arrived, according to prosecutors. After threatening the pair he threw a chisel at them before jumping down to the ground, brandishing a 25cm (10in) knife.

"The officer opened fire five times, hitting the individual four times," said Rouen public prosecutor Frédéric Teillet, explaining that he had seen the footage on the security cameras.

Firefighters at the scene eventually brought the fire under control inside the synagogue in the historic centre of the city. There appeared to be no victims other than the armed man, the mayor said.

Damage inside the synagogue has been described as significant. "I'm really upset, it's catastrophic," said Natacha Benhaïm, the head of Rouen's Jewish community of some 150 families.

The walls and furniture had been left blackened by the fire, although "the Torah scrolls, the holy books, did not come to any harm".

REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes A French police forensics member collects evidence after officers shot dead an armed man earlier who set fire to the city's synagogue in Rouen, France, May 17, 2024REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
Police scoured the roof of the synagogue for evidence hours after the attack

Inspecting the damage inside the synagogue, Rabbi Shmouel Lubecki said the city's small community was devastated by the attack.

"The message the community needs to hear is we mustn't give up. We must be able to practise our Judaism in complete freedom; antisemites cannot destroy us. " he told BFMTV. "So we're asking the community to light the candles this sabbath evening and come to the synagogue if you can."

Mr Teillet said two investigations were under way - into an arson attack on a place of worship and into the use of a police weapon outside the building.

Although the officer was currently in custody, the prosecutor said that video footage indicated he had used his gun "according to conditions allowed by the internal security code".

Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin visited the synagogue and praised police for their fast response and their courage in tackling the attacker.

"I want to reiterate, on this sabbath evening, that at the interior ministry we are extremely determined to protect France's entire Jewish community, wherever they are, and that they must practise their religion without fear."

Little is known about the suspected attacker, who was not carrying any form of identity at the time. French media report that he was a 29-year-old Algerian who was in the process of appealing against an expulsion order from French authorities.

France, in common with the rest of Western Europe, has seen a surge in antisemitism since Hamas attacked southern Israel last October leading to the current war in Gaza.

Earlier this week a memorial in Paris that honours 3,900 men and women who helped rescue Jews during the Nazi occupation of France in World War Two was daubed with red-painted hands.

President Emmanuel Macron said defacing the wall undermined the memory of France's heroes and its victims of the Holocaust.

France has the third largest Jewish community in the world, after Israel and the US.

The head of France's Council of Jewish Institutions (Crif), Yonathan Arfi, said that "setting a synagogue on fire - that's intending to intimidate every Jew".

Another leading figure in the Jewish community, Elie Korchia, thanked police for their quick response to "a new antisemitic drama in our country".

The president of Rouen's Union of Muslims, Imam Bachar El Sayidi, visited the synagogue on Friday in a message of solidarity: "We firmly condemn what has happened. If a mosque was attacked it would be no different."

Rouen's places of worship have come under attack in the past. Eight years ago a priest was fatally stabbed while leading a church service.

The latest violence comes days after gunmen shot dead two prison officers in an ambush at a motorway toll south of the city. Convicted prisoner Mohamed Amra escaped during the attack and his still on the run.

Map of Rouen