A French soldier patrolling
a business neighbourhood west of Paris has been stabbed in the neck by a man
who quickly fled the scene and is being sought by police, President Francois
Hollande said.
The soldier was patrolling
in uniform with two other men as part of France's Vigipirate anti-terrorist
surveillance plan when he was approached from behind around 1600 GMT and
stabbed in the neck with a knife or a box-cutter.
Hollande, in the Ethiopian
city of Addis Ababa, commented on the stabbing to say that the man was still on
the run and police were exploring all leads.
"We still don't know
the exact circumstances of the attack or the identity of the attacker, but we
are exploring all options," Hollande told journalists.
Pierre-Andre Peyvel, police
prefect for the Hauts-de-Seine area, said the soldier had lost a considerable
amount of blood but would survive, and was being treated in a nearby military
hospital.
"The wound appears to
be quite serious, but it's not life-threatening," he told iTele news
television.
Peyvel said the man was able
to flee into a crowded shopping area in the La Defense business neighbourhood
before the two other soldiers, who were walking in front of him, were able to
react.
French daily Le Parisien
cited a police source as saying the suspected attacker was a bearded man of
North African origin about 30 years old, and was wearing an Arab-style garment
under his jacket.
However, Peyvel declined to
confirm or deny that description and said further details about the attacker's
identity would be forthcoming.
France is on high alert for
attacks following its military intervention in Mali in January, which prompted
threats against French interests from AQIM.
The attack came days after a
British soldier was killed on a London street by two men who said they were
acting out of revenge for violence against Muslims.
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