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Posted: 2014-12-20 19:26:00
Forensic police collect evidence outside the police station of Joue les-Tours on December

Forensic police collect evidence outside the police station of Joue les-Tours on December 20, 2014 where French police shot dead a man who attacked them with a knife in a police station while shouting "Allahu Akbar" ("God is great" in Arabic). Picture: AFP / Guillaume Souvant Source: AFP

A SUSPECTED Islamist fanatic has been shot dead by cops after stabbing three officers in a knife rampage at a police station.

The man, shouting “Allahu Akbar” (”God is great” in Arabic), attacked the police station in Joue-les-Tours near the city of Tours in central France on Saturday.

The man injured the face of an officer at the entrance to the police station in Joue-les-Tours near the city of Tours in central France on Saturday and injured two other before he was shot, the interior ministry said.

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Forensic police collect evidence inside the police station of Joue les-Tours on December

Forensic police collect evidence inside the police station of Joue les-Tours on December 20, 2014, after an assault against police officers by a man who was then shot by the police. AFP / Guillaume Souvant Source: AFP

Anti-terrorist investigators were probing the incident, a judicial source said.

The perpetrator was a French citizen born in Burundi, Southeast Africa, in 1994 and known to police for common crimes, a source close to the case told AFP, adding that the attacker “shouted ‘Allahu Akbar’ from the moment he entered until his last breath.”

According to a statement by the interior ministry, the assailant was around 20 years of age, and was “killed (by) police officers present using their issued firearms.”

Prosecutor Jean-Luc Beck stands outside the police station of Joue les-Tours on December

Prosecutor Jean-Luc Beck stands outside the police station of Joue les-Tours on December 20, 2014, after an assault against police officers by a man who was then shot by the police. AFP / Guillaume Souvant Source: AFP

The attacker was not on any watch lists maintained by France’s main domestic intelligence service, the General Directorate for Internal Security, the source involved in the inquiry said.

But the source noted the assailant’s brother was known to security agencies for his radical convictions and had at one point planned to travel to Syria.

“The investigation is leading towards an attack on police forces on radical Islamist motives,” another source close the case said.

Officials said the condition of the three wounded police officers was stable.

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