France’s interior minister has called for a comprehensive plan to combat arms trafficking in the country, after a shooting early Sunday killed one man and injured five people in the centre of Marseille, reports Radio France Internationale.
Two men opened fire with a 9 mm automatic weapon outside of a 24-hour bar in the city’s Opera district.
"It would seem that following a dispute, a vehicle facing the street opened fire with a Kalashnikov on people who were at the entrance to the bar," Marseille’s deputy prosecutor André Ribes told news agency AFP.
"For now, we cannot call this a settling of scores," he said.
A security guard was killed and three of the five wounded are in a serious condition, according to Ribes.
Some of the victims were "collateral damage" while others worked as security for the restaurant, including the slain guard, he said. There were 15 to 20 people present during the shooting.
The city in southern France and its surroundings areas are the scene of turf wars between multiple rival gangs battling for control of the drugs trade in the city's poorest neighbourhoods.
"There is always too much violence in this city," interior minister Bernard Cazeneuve told French television news show Le Grand Rendez-vous on Sunday.
He said 6,000 weapons a year were being seized from criminal groups, of which 1,200 were combat rifles and other weapons of war.
Read more of this report from RFI.
See also: How arms dealer who bought guns used in Paris terror attacks was never questioned