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French policemen search the Vert-Bois neighbourhood in Saint-Dizier where a Franco-Algerian student, allegedly planning a church attack in France, used to spend time with his family. Photo: AFP

French police foil terrorist attack on churches by Franco-Algerian student

Franco-Algerian student under arrest for plotting attacks on christian targets and his alleged part in the death of a young mother

AFP

A student allegedly planning a church attack in France has been arrested, the country's interior minister said yesterday, just over three months after Paris was hit by a jihadist killing spree.

In a baffling series of events, the 24-year-old Franco-Algerian IT student - known to intelligence services for wanting to fight in Syria alongside jihadists - was detained on Sunday in Paris after he himself called police over a bullet injury to his leg.

"Several war weapons, hand guns, ammunition, bullet-proof vests and computer and telephone hardware" were subsequently found at his home and in his car, Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said.

His DNA was later found in the car of a young mother from northern France who died in mysterious circumstances over the weekend near Paris.

"Sunday morning, this attack was foiled."

The arrest comes more than three months after Islamic extremists went on a three-day killing spree in and around Paris, leaving 17 people dead.

The January 7-9 attacks on magazine, a policewoman and a Jewish supermarket sent shockwaves around the world, and prompted several reforms in France including controversial new spy laws under debate in parliament.

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls reiterated government warnings that the country was facing an "unprecedented terrorist threat".

The attack was foiled by chance after the suspect called police on Sunday, saying he was injured, according to police sources, who asked to remain anonymous.

They found him with a bullet in the leg, and he described being wounded during a settling of scores.

Investigators do not exclude that he may have injured himself.

Then they searched his home in southeast Paris and found the incriminating research on his computer.

Several members of his entourage and family have since been detained, some of whom sympathise with radical Islam, the sources said.

During their investigations, police then discovered the suspect's DNA in the car of Aurelie Chatelain, an unemployed dance enthusiast, who was found dead over the weekend in Villejuif near Paris - the town where the churches were targeted, according to a police source.

But the suspect's alleged link to the death was not clear.

Chatelain's body was discovered on Sunday morning in her car. She had been shot three times.

The 32-year-old mother had just come to the area from northern France to take a pilates training course and had written of how happy she was to be there on her Facebook page on Saturday evening.

Some nine hours later, her body was discovered by passers-by as smoke poured out of the car from an overheating laptop.

Chatelain's distraught father, Jean-Luc, said the mother of five-year-old Juliette had no enemies.

Cazeneuve promised yesterday to find why Chatelain was killed, and reiterated that the country was faced with an "unprecedented terrorist threat".

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Police foil terrorist attack on churches
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