Prime Minister Manuel Valls, who rushed home from an official trip to South America, warned that France faced more attacks and that Friday’s assault on a gas factory near the second city of Lyon would increase tensions in the country and put citizens’ resilience “to the test”.
President Francois Hollande called an urgent meeting with Valls and key ministers Saturday, as his government grapples with the Islamist threat facing France, which has seen hundreds of citizens leave to wage jihad in Iraq and Syria.
No jihadist group has claimed the French attack which struck on the same day as a massacre at a Tunisian beach resort in which 38 people were gunned down and a suicide bombing in Kuwait that killed 27. The other two attacks have been claimed by the Islamic State group.
“Jihad Nauseum” headlined France’s Liberation newspaper, warning of a new peak in the “global guerilla war launched by Islamist fanatics.”
A suspect, Yassin Salhi, 35, is being held by French police for causing an explosion by driving a delivery van into a warehouse containing bottles of dangerous gas and chemicals at the US-owned Air Products factory in Saint-Quentin-Fallavier, some 40 kilometres (25 miles) from Lyon.
Firefighters overpowered Salhi before discovering the decapitated body of his 54-year-old boss — who ran a delivery firm — near the car, along with a knife.
The victim’s head was pinned to a nearby fence.
“The head was surrounded by two Islamic flags bearing the Shahada, the profession of (the Muslim) faith,” said French prosecutor Francois Molins.
– More attacks likely –
Valls warned Friday’s attack would fuel tensions in France — home to Western Europe’s largest Muslim population — that “will be exploited”.
“It’s difficult for a society to live for years under the threat of attack,” he told AFP on a flight back from Bogota, adding: “The question is not… if there will be another attack, but when.”
“This macabre act of decapitation, staged with flags, is new in France” and aimed at “making an impact,” Valls said.
Beheadings — an act of “dehumanisation and animalisation” according to University of Geneva historian Michel Porret — have in recent times become a trademark of the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria.
The gory attack in France came nearly six months after a three-day Islamist killing spree in and around Paris left 17 people dead, most of them gunned down in the editorial offices of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.
Speaking in Brussels after cutting short an EU summit, French President Francois Hollande labelled the factory beheading “a terrorist attack.”