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Beheading at French gas plant attack is 'Islamic State trademark'

Yassin Sahli denies religious motive but Paris prosecutor said his actions 'correspond very precisely' to the orders of jihadist group.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

A French prosecutor confirmed Tuesday that the man who beheaded his boss and tried to blow up a gas factory in Lyon had a "terrorist motive" and links to the Islamic State group in Syria, reports Yahoo! News.

The investigation "indicates a terrorist motive in Yassin Salhi's act, even though it is justified by personal considerations", said Paris chief prosecutor François Molins.

The 35-year-old, long known to security services for his radical views, was arrested Friday after an attack in which he rammed his gas-filled delivery van into a warehouse containing dangerous chemicals, causing an explosion.

Firefighters alerted by the blast found him trying to open gas bottles inside the Air Products factory, shouting "Allahu Akbar (God is greatest), before making the grisly discovery of the severed head of Salhi's 54-year-old boss Herve Cornara.

"Salhi decapitated his victim, he hung the head on a fence to get maximum publicity, as he told us during interrogation," said Molins.

The prosecutor said that Salhi claimed to have strangled his boss "with one hand" before stopping 500 metres before the factory to decapitate him with a knife with a 25 cm blade.

Read more of this AFP report published by Yahoo! News.