DEVELOPING – A letter bomb exploded at the International Monetary Fund
office in Paris early Thursday, lightly injuring one person, police
said.
Speaking to reporters, Paris police chief Michel Cadot said
the device was sent by post and the small explosion was probably cause
by a homemade device. He said there had been telephone threats made to
the IMF, but it’s not clear whether they were linked to Thursday’s
incident.
It is unclear who sent the homemade explosive, which was like a "big firecracker" and sent by regular
mail, Cadot said.
French
media reported that the person who opened a letter addressed to a
senior IMF official that contained an explosive substance.
The
secretary who opened the letter was injured by shrapnel in the face and
hurt in the eardrum because of a "rather violent noise," the police
chief said.
On Twitter, the police department said the secretary was taken to the hospital for treatment.
Christine Lagarde, the head of the IMF, condemned the explosion, saying it was a “cowardly act of violence.”
"I
condemn this cowardly act of violence and reaffirm the IMF's resolve to
continue our work in line with our mandate," she said.
Staff
from the IMF office were evacuated and armed military officers and
police guarded the area, in a chic district of western Paris. The World
Bank office in France is in the same compound.
Police searched all four floors of the building, Cadot said. No one else was injured and only light damages were incurred.
France has been on high alert after a string of deadly Islamic extremist attacks over the past two years.
The
most recent attack happened last month when a machete-wielding
assailant shouting “Allahu Akbar!” was shot by soldiers stationed
outside the Louvre Museum. The attacked, who was shot four times after
injuring a soldier, was identified as Egyptian-born Abdullah Reda Refaie
al-Hamahmy, 28.
The incident on Thursday comes a day after the
German finance ministry in Berlin also intercepted a parcel bomb sent to
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble on Wednesday. The package contained
low-grade explosives, like those used in firecrackers.
Mailroom
employees at the ministry quickly identified the package as suspicious
and called in explosives experts, who destroyed it with a controlled
explosion.
"The package contained an explosive mix," Berlin
Police said in a statement. "It was designed to cause severe injuries
when the package is opened."
A Greek far left group called the Conspiracy of Fire Cells said on its website that it had sent the device.
Source: Foxnews.com
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