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Policeman killed, two others wounded in Champs-Elysées shootings

At least one police officer was killed and two others wounded when a gunman, who was subsequently shot dead in return fire, attacked a police vehicle on the popular Champs-Elysées avenue in central Paris using what the interior ministry described as an 'automatic weapon'.

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One police officer and an attacker were killed in a Thursday night shooting on the Champs-Elysées avenue in central Paris, the French interior ministry said, reports CNN.

A car stopped at 102 Champs-Elysées in front of a police van, ministry spokesman Pierre Henry Brandet said. A man emerged from the car and opened fire on the van with an "automatic weapon," he said. The police returned fire and killed the attacker.

The ministry said one police officer was killed. It's not known if the attacker was a man or a woman.

Police officers block the access to the Champs-Elysées in Paris.

French anti-terror prosecutors and the National Intelligence Service are opening an investigation to determine the nature of the incident, the Paris public prosecutor's office said in a text to CNN. This means they are looking at terror as a possible motive in the attack.

CNN affiliate BFMTV is reporting that Paris anti-terror forces are heading the investigation, but Police Secretary Yvan Assioma told reporters there were "no theories" about whether this was a criminal act or an act of terror.

BFMTV also reported an unidentified man was hit by "cross-fire" in the Champs-Elysées area. BFMTV has not specified if the unidentified man was the attacker or a bystander.

The shooting shut down the normally busy Champs-Elysees, one of the top tourist attractions in Paris, and video showed the avenue empty of residents and tourists but teeming with security officers at 9.30 p.m. All businesses in the area closed.

At least three underground train stations of the Paris Metro - the Champs-Elysées-Clemenceau, George V and F. Roosevelt stations - have been "closed off" near the site of the police operation on the Champs-Elysées in Paris, BFMTV reports.

Paris resident Daoud Kal, 29, said he was walking in the area near a metro station when he heard four to five shots. He looked around, but couldn't identify where the shots were coming from. People panicked and ran away from the scene and he joined them.

The CNN Paris bureau is on this street and staffers reported hearing a dozen shots. At least 20 police vehicles were seen on the street.

Officers could be seen forcibly removing innocent citizens from the area as they attempted to get them to safety.

President Donald Trump, speaking at a news conference in Washington with the visiting Italian Prime Minister, offered condolences to the people of France after the shooting in Paris, saying it "looks like another terrorist attack."

"What can you say? It never ends," the President said.

The shooting comes three days before French general elections and Paris was already in a state of heightened alert. French politicians immediately spoke out on social media.

French far-right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen said on Twitter, "My emotions and solidarity for the police, once again targeted".

Conservative French presidential hopeful François Fillion, also using Twitter, said, "Paying homage to police who give their lives to protect ours, #ChampsElysees".

The Champs-Elysées is an avenue lined with restaurants, cafes, exclusive designer boutiques and tourist shops.

Read more of this report from CNN.