
The incident occurred just as thousands of people poured on to the streets on a warm midsummer’s night to celebrate the country’s biggest public holiday of the year, Bastille Day, and to watch the fireworks display — a traditional feature in every city and village across France in the annual celebrations. The truck slammed into the crowds gathered on the city’s Promenade des Anglais, which runs along the Mediterranean seafront, and sent those who could escape screaming in panic as they fled the scene. The driver fired on the crowd before being fatally shot by police, officials said.
The city’s deputy mayor , Christian Estrosi, said more than 70 were killed in the attack.
“There was carnage on the road,” eyewitness Wassim Bouhlel told the AP. “Bodies everywhere.”
The Nice region’s president said that the truck was loaded with arms and grenades, according to the Associated Press.
For
France, the attack on Thursday night is likely to be deeply distressing
— and to raise the question about how the country can possible avoid
further attacks, given the extraordinary security measures already in
place. What is more, Thursday’s mass deaths, if terrorism, will be the
third terror attack in France in just 18 months; in January 2015 ISIS
and al-Qaeda gunmen killed 17 people at the Charlie Hebdo satiric
publication and a kosher supermarket, both in Paris. Then came the Paris
attacks — a devastating blow, from which the country had only just
begun to shake off the anxiety and grief.
By midnight, no group
had claimed responsibility for the chaos. But regional police and local
officials in the South of France quickly declared it a terrorist attack.
They appealed for people to remain calm and went on television to tell
people to stay indoors — clearly fearing that there might be multiple
attacks on the streets, as there were in last November’s Paris attacks,
when ISIS gunmen-suicide bombers opened fire on cafés and a music hall,
killed 130 people. On Twitter, the regional mayor Christian Estrosi told
Nice residents, “Stay for the moment in your homes. More info to come.”
France
has been under a state of emergency since then, and thousands of armed
soldiers patrol department stores, stations, and other public places.
Security was hugely ramped up during the FIFA European Football
Championships, which French officials feared could be a target of
attack. Indeed, police in Nice evacuated a shopping center in Nice late
last month, after a threat that a bomb would explode during the
England-Iceland match being played in that city.
There was a palpable
sense of relief among the French after the championship’s final game
last Sunday, that the monthlong tournament ended without an attack.
The
scene in Nice was one of devastation, with the heavy-duty white truck
stalled amid the bloodshed on the street, its windows smashed and
riddled with bullets, from police gunfire. Nice police said around
midnight that their gunfire had killed the truck driver, but that one
other man had fled the scene, and was still on the run.
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