Fresh blast heard near site of French gunman siege
TOULOUSE: A blast and two gunshots were heard early Thursday near the flat in southern France where a self-declared al-Qaida militant is holed up after claiming responsibility for seven murders.
The blast at around 2:00am (0100 GMT) came as French police special forces besieged the first floor flat in the southern city of Toulouse where Mohamed Merah, a 23-year-old armed extremist, is holed up.
A source close to the operation earlier denied rumours that three earlier blasts had signalled a renewed assault on the apartment, which police attempted to raid earlier in the day, before retreating with two wounded officers.
But an official said: "He said he wanted to give himself up. He changed his mind, so we're stepping up the pressure on him to surrender."
There was no indication of an exchange of fire following the blasts. Merah is thought to be armed with a Kalashnikov assault rifle, a Mini-Uzi submachine pistol and a collection of handguns.
According to prosecutors, after repelling a pre-dawn raid on Wednesday, he entered into talks with a police negotiator and claimed responsibility for a series of deadly gun attacks, claiming to be an al-Qaida-trained Islamist militant.
France's top anti-terror prosecutor Francois Molins said Merah had claimed responsibility for three shootings over the previous 10 days in which three French paratroopers, three Jewish children and a teacher were killed in cold blood, shocking the nation.
He claimed to be avenging Palestinian deaths and opposing the French military's involvement in Afghanistan and France's ban on full-face veils.
Molins said the suspect had shot and wounded two elite officers after police first raided the apartment building.
"Mohamed Merah explained that he belonged to al-Qaida. He explained he had been trained by al-Qaida in the Pakistani-Afghanistan region in Waziristan," Molins told reporters in Toulouse, scene of two of the shootings.
Waziristan is a tribal area straddling the Afghan-Pakistani border which is known as a haven for Islamist insurgents -- including al-Qaida militants -- connected to Taliban guerrillas fighting in both countries.
Fresh blast heard near site of French gunman siege - The Times of India