Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 112, No. 159, Ed. 1 Friday, January 8, 2016 Page: 6 of 21
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INTERNA! IONAL
INTERNATIONAL
6A
7A
Friday, January 8, 2016
Denton Record-Chronicle
Denton Record-Chronicle
Friday, January 8, 2016
Man wearing fake explosives vest killed in Paris
S. Korea to resume anti-North propaganda broadcasts
cers at the entrance of a police
station near the Montmartre
neighborhood, home to the
Sacre Coeur Cathedral. Just mo-
ments before, French President
Francois Hollande, speaking in
a different location, paid re-
spects to officers fallen in the line
of duty.
The man at the police station
is believed to have cried out “Al-
lahu akbar,” Arabic for “God is
great.” He has not been identi-
fied, and Interior Ministry
spokesman Pierre-Henry Bran-
det told The Associated Press
that police do not believe anyone
else was involved.
Alexis Mukenge, who saw
the shooting from inside anoth-
and powerful hydrogen bomb.
The loudspeaker broadcasts,
which will start today, believed
to be the birthday of young
North Korean leader Kim Jong
Un, are certain to infuriate au-
thoritarian Pyongyang because
they are meant to raise ques-
tions in North Korean minds
about the infallibility of the rul-
ing Kim family.
South Korea stopped earlier
broadcasts after it agreed with
Pyongyang in late August on a
package of measures aimed at
easing animosities that had the
rivals threatening war.
Experts, meanwhile, are try-
ing to uncover more details
about the detonation that drew
group, and “an unequivocal
written claim of responsibility in
Arabic” with the man’s body, the
prosecutor’s office said. It did
not provide details about the
claim.
er building, told the network
iTele that police told the man,
“Stop. Move back.” Mukenge
said officers fired twice and the
man immediately dropped to
the ground.
Video shot from a window
above the station and provided
to the AP shows the man’s body
lying on the ground in a pool of
blood, a bomb-detecting robot
nearby.
The Goutte d’Or neighbor-
hood in Paris’ 18th arrondisse-
ment, a multi-ethnic district not
far from the Gare du Nord train
station, was briefly locked down,
and two metro lines running
through the area were halted.
They reopened after about two
hours Thursday.
Two schools were under lock-
down, and police cleared out
hundreds of people in the area.
Shops were ordered closed and
shop owners hastily rolled down
metal shutters.
Nora Borrias was unable to
get to her home in the neighbor-
hood because of the barricades.
Shaken by the incident, she said
“it’s like the Charlie Hebdo affair
isn’t over.”
Hollande had said earlier
that a “terrorist threat” would
continue to weigh on France.
The government has announced
new measures extending police
powers to allow officers to use
their weapons to “neutralize
someone who has just commit-
ted one or several murders and
is likely to repeat these crimes.”
At 11:35 a.m. on Jan. 7, 2015,
two French-bom brothers killed
11 people at the building where
Charlie Hebdo operated, as well
as a Muslim policeman outside.
Over the next two days, an ac-
complice shot a policewoman to
death and then stormed a ko-
sher supermarket, killing four
hostages. A total of 17 people
died, as did all three gunmen.
Hollande especially called for
better surveillance of “radical-
ized” citizens who have joined
Islamic State or other militant
groups in Syria and Iraq when
they return to France.
worldwide skepticism and con-
demnation.
It may take weeks or longer
to confirm or refute the North’s
claim that it successfully tested a
hydrogen bomb, which would
mark a major and unanticipated
advance for its still-limited nu-
clear arsenal.
Even a test of an atomic
bomb, a less sophisticated and
less powerful weapon, would
push its scientists and engineers
closer to their goal of building a
nuclear warhead small enough
to place on a missile that can
reach the U.S. mainland.
Statements from the White
House said President Barack
Obama had spoken to South
Korean President Park Geun-
Hye and to Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe of Japan.
The statements said the
countries “agreed to work to-
gether to forge a united and
strong international response to
North Korea’s latest reckless be-
havior.”
Obama reaffirmed the
“unshakeable U.S. commit-
ment” to the security of South
Korea and Japan, according to
the statements.
U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry said he spoke with Wang
Yi, foreign minister of China,
North Korea’s main ally, about
ways of working together on the
issue.
‘We agree that there cannot
be business as usual, and we
agreed that we will work very
closely together to determine
the steps that we can take in or-
der to address our increasing
concerns about that nuclear
test,” Kerry said in Washington.
Park’s office said she also
spoke with Abe over the phone
and that they vowed coopera-
tion to ensure that the U.N. Se-
curity Council imposes strong
and effective measures against
the North.
South Korean and U.S. mil-
itary leaders also discussed the
deployment of U.S. “strategic as-
sets” in the wake of the North’s
test, Seoul’s Defense Ministry
said Thursday.
Ministry officials refused to
elaborate about what U.S. mili-
tary assets were under consider-
ation, but they likely refer to
B-52 bombers, F-22 stealth
fighters and nuclear-powered
submarines.
When animosities sharply
rose in the spring of 2013 follow-
ing North Korea’s third nuclear
test, the U.S. took the unusual
step of sending its most power-
ful warplanes — B-2 stealth
bombers, F-22 stealth fighters
and B-52 bombers — to drills
with South Korea in a show of
force. B-2 and B-52 bombers are
capable of delivering nuclear
weapons.
By Lori Hinnant
and Elaine Ganley
Associated Press
PARIS — Police shot and
killed a man wearing a fake ex-
plosive vest who threatened
them with a butcher knife at a
Paris police station Thursday, a
year almost to the minute after
two Islamic extremists burst in-
to the offices of the satirical
newspaper Charlie Hebdo, kill-
ing 11 people and unleashing a
bloody 12 months in the French
capital.
The Paris prosecutor’s anti-
terrorism unit opened an inves-
tigation after police found a cell-
phone, a piece of paper with an
emblem of the Islamic State
By Foster Klug
and Hyung-jin Kim
Associated Press
SEOUL, South Korea — In
response to North Korea’s latest
nuclear test, South Korea on
Thursday announced it would
resume cross-border propagan-
da broadcasts that Pyongyang
considers an act of war. Seoul al-
so began talks with Washington
that could see the arrival of nu-
clear-powered U.S. submarines
and warplanes to the Korean
Peninsula.
From Seoul to Washington,
Beijing to the United Nations,
world powers are looking at
ways to punish Pyongyang for
the test of what it called a new
France has been under a state
of emergency since a series of at-
tacks claimed by the Islamic
State group killed 130 people in
Paris on Nov. 13, and tensions in-
creased this week as the anniver-
sary of the January attacks ap-
proached. Soldiers were posted
in front of schools and security
forces were more present than
usual amid a series of tributes to
the dead.
Officials said the man shot to
death Thursday threatened offi-
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Parks, Scott K. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 112, No. 159, Ed. 1 Friday, January 8, 2016, newspaper, January 8, 2016; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1127415/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .