LAW enforcements in France have arrested a suspect in an arson attack on a synagogue in a southwestern Mediterranean town that injured a police officer.
According to NBC News, the country’s acting interior minister, on Sunday, said two cars parked at the Beth Yaacov synagogue complex in the seaside resort town of La Grande Motte, near Montpellier, France, were set ablaze just after 8 a.m. Saturday.
Firefighters discovered additional fires at two entrances to the synagogue.
A police officer who walked up to the site was injured after a propane gas tank placed near the burning vehicles exploded.
CrimesChroniclers reliably gathered that five people, including the rabbi, who were present in the synagogue complex at the time of the attack were unharmed.
“The alleged perpetrator of the arson attack on the synagogue has been arrested,” Gerald Darmanin, the acting interior minister, said in a post on X.
He visited the site on Saturday afternoon along with acting Prime Minister Gabriel Attal and met with local officials and the synagogue staff.
Darmanin also hailed the “professional conduct” of police forces and its elite intervention unit “despite the gunfire” during the operation.
French prosecutors said the man was arrested in the southern city of Nimes shortly before midnight Saturday.
“He opened fire on the police intervention unit, which returned fire, injuring (the suspect) in the face,” the National Antiterrorism Prosecutor’s Office said in a statement Sunday.
