Several arrested over terror threat at Notre Dame cathedral

Abandoned car with gas cylinders and fuel cans inside found near building on Saturday

This video grab taken on Saturday  in Paris, shows a car discovered in Paris containing gas cannisters. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
This video grab taken on Saturday in Paris, shows a car discovered in Paris containing gas cannisters. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

French police investigating the abandonment of a car packed with gas cylinders near Paris's Notre Dame cathedral have arrested several suspects and also established that the vehicle contained three jerry cans of diesel fuel, judicial and police sources said.

The discovery last Saturday night of the Peugeot 607 loaded with seven gas cylinders, six of them full, triggered an inquiry by counter-terrorism experts in a country where more than 200 people have died in attacks over the past year and a half.

Police sources had said on Tuesday that no detonator device was found in the car, but the presence of diesel-filled cannisters added to concerns that there had been a plan to explode the vehicle.

Police arrested three women on Thursday evening, a police official told Reuters. One of the women attacked police, who injured her in protecting themselves. A police official was hurt but his injuries were not life-threatening, the source said.

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The arrests took place in Boussy-Saint-Antoine, some 30km (20 miles) southeast of Paris, connected to the gas cylinder investigation.

The arrests take to seven the number held in custody by police, who are also trying to find the 19-year-old daughter of the car’s owner.

A first couple, aged 34 and 29, were arrested on a motorway on Tuesday in southern France.

The Peugeot was found in the early hours of Sunday morning on a Seine riverside road metres from the Notre Dame cathedral.

Documents with writing in Arabic were also found in the car, which had no registration plates and was left with its hazard lights flashing.

The car owner was taken into custody earlier this week but later released. He had gone to police on Sunday to report that his daughter had disappeared with his car, officials said.

His daughter, officials say, is known to police for wanting to leave for Syria, where scores of religiously radicalised people of French and other nationalities have joined the ranks of the Islamic State militant group.

France, which is taking part in bombing the militant group's bases in Iraq and Syria, remains on maximum alert after calls for attacks on the country.

Reuters