(CHRISTIAN HARTMANN / TT NYHETSBYRÅN)

Åklagare: Kvinnorna tillhör IS-styrd terrorcell

De tre kvinnor som greps utanför Paris i går tillhörde en terrorcell som styrts av IS i Syrien. Det säger åklagaren Francois Molins på en presskonferens, enligt France 24.
Enligt åklagaren använder IS unga kvinnor för att föra fram sina budskap utanför Syrien.
De gripna kvinnorna ska också ha kopplingar till terrordådet mot en kyrka i Normandie i somras. Enligt Sky News ska en av kvinnorna ha varit förlovad med mannen som dödade prästen. Kvinnan ska innan dess även ha varit förlovad med den man som dödade en polis och hans fru i Paris-förorten Magnanville i juli.

bakgrund
 
Polismordet i Magnanville
Wikipedia (en)
On 13 June 2016, a police officer and his wife, a police secretary, were stabbed to death in their home in Magnanville, France, located about 55 km (34 mi) west of Paris, by a man convicted in 2013 of associating with a group planning terrorist acts. Amaq News Agency, an online outlet said to be sponsored by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), said that a source had claimed that ISIL was behind the attack. Prosecutor François Molins said the attacker, Larossi Abballa, appeared to be acting on a recent general order from Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi to "kill miscreants at home with their families" during the month of Ramadan. On 18 June, prosecutors charged two men, Charaf-Din Aberouz and Saad Rajraji, who had been convicted in 2013 of "being part of a French jihadist group," on suspicion that Abballa "wasn't acting alone."
bakgrund
 
Kyrkoattacken i Normandie
Wikipedia (en)
On 26 July 2016, two Islamist terrorists attacked participants in a Mass at a Catholic church in Saint-Étienne-du-Rouvray, Normandy, northern France. Wielding knives and wearing fake explosive belts, the men took six people captive and later killed one of them, 85-year-old priest Jacques Hamel, by slitting his throat and also critically wounded an 86-year-old man. The terrorists were shot dead by BRI police as they tried to leave the church. The attackers, 19-year-olds Adel Kermiche and Abdel Malik Petitjean, had pledged allegiance to Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, which claimed responsibility for the attack.
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