A suspected terrorist who triggered a bomb in a Paris hotel room is an ex-Russian soldier who wanted to target French companies supplying weapons to Ukraine, it is alleged.
The 26-year-old, who has not been named, was on Thursday in custody at the headquarters of France’s domestic intelligence service.
He suffered wounds to the face and arms after igniting TATP – an explosive dubbed ‘Mother of Satan’ by ISIS and Al-Qaeda – at the B&B Hotel at Charles de Gaulle airport on Monday afternoon.
On Thursday, a source close to the investigation confirmed that he "fought with the Russian army in Ukraine over the past few months. He arrived in France very recently, and was travelling on both Russian and Ukrainian passports, while also carrying passports from other countries," the source said.
"There are indications that he was producing improvised bombs in order to target companies supplying weapons to Ukraine." According to Ministry of Defence figures, France has supplied more than £2billion-worth of military hardware to Ukraine, including anti-tank and missile systems.
Putin accused of surrounding himself with same 'actors' at series of eventsThe suspect, who is facing a range of terrorism-related charges, was born in the war-torn Donbas region of Ukraine, and is a Russian speaker. Despite his injuries, he is cooperating with agents from the General Directorate of Internal Security (DGSI) – France’s equivalent of MI5.
His custody period ends on Friday, when magistrates will work out the next stage of the investigation. He has claimed to investigators that he had built homemade batteries for mobile phones when one of them exploded.
Nobody else was injured in the blast, and the B&B Hotel, which has more than 200 rooms, was evacuated and then closed. Multiple security sources have confirmed that traces of TATP were found in his hotel room, together with batteries and barbecue lighters in plastic packages.
TATP was used by ISIS suicide bombers during the November 2015 attacks on Paris, which claimed 130 lives, and also by the Manchester Arena bomber in 2017, when 22 people were killed, and more than 1000 wounded.
In regards to the current case in Paris, anti-terrorism prosecutors have opened an enquiry into ‘participation in a terrorist criminal association with a view to preparing crimes of attacks against persons, possession of an incendiary or explosive substance or product or of elements intended to compose an explosive device with a view to preparing destruction, and damage or harm to people, in connection with a terrorist enterprise.’
It comes as Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky joins other world leaders, including American President Joe Biden, and King Charles, for the D-Day 80th anniversary commemorations.
A massive security operation is accompanying their visit to Normandy, where they are guests of French President Emmanuel Macron.