PARIS,
July 14 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - A neo-Nazi militant, who
was arrested in Paris Sunday, July 14, after firing a rifle near
President Jacques Chirac at the traditional Bastille Day parade in
what his wife described as an attempted assassination, tried to commit
suicide afterwards by turning the gun on himself, a French minister
said.
"He
fired a first shot, which was deflected, he was then overcome and he
tried to turn the gun on himself," said Patrick Devedjian,
minister for local liberties.
"It
wasn't an incident, it was an attack. A man from the far right, even
further right than the National Front, made an attempt on the life of
the president," the minister added.
Maxime
Brunerie, 25, was standing in the crowd at the Arc de Triomphe when he
produced a .22 rifle from a brown guitar-case and fired one shot
before being overpowered by police and led away, Agence France-Presse
(AFP) said.
Chirac,
69, had passed by moments before in an open-top vehicle at the start
of the military march-past. It was not clear if the president was
aware of the incident nor if he had been in serious danger.
Police
said Brunerie, a student and part-time chauffeur from the southern
Paris suburb of Evry, was "known to belong to neo-Nazi and
hooligan movements." Officials said he was a member of the
far-right student group GUD and had links to skinhead groups.
"I
was watching the parade. Mr Chirac was going by in his car when I felt
the crowd moving to my right. Then I saw, two or three meters away, a
man aiming in the direction of the president," said Mohamed
Chelali, 50, a Canadian tourist.
"Someone
hit the gunman's hand and I grabbed a part of the weapon, and some
metal bit of it fell off. A third person kept it pointed
upwards," Chelali said after being interviewed by police.
Interior
Minister Nicolas Sarkozy said Brunerie was a "militant of the
extreme-right... known for his violence and with a police
record."
Asked
whether there had been an attempt on her husband's life, Chirac's wife
Bernadette said, "Yes, it's clear."
The
right-wing Chirac was re-elected head of state in May 2002, and with
his supporters now controlling parliament, he is one of the most
Europe's most powerful politicians.
After
the incident, the parade down the Champs Elysees continued unaffected,
with Franco-American relations occupying the central theme of the
commemoration.
A
squad of 170 cadets from the U.S. military academy West Point took the
lead, and a fire-engine from the New York Fire Department drew warm
applause.
A
detachment of New York fire-fighters, as well as relatives of some who
died on September 11, were among the guests of honor at the
garden-party.
The
July 14 celebrations mark the fall of the Bastille prison in Paris at
the start of the French revolution in 1789.
Altogether
some 4,000 soldiers took part as well as 90 aircraft, including some
that flew recently in operations over Afghanistan.
The
parade took place at a time of heightened concern about the level of
military spending in France, with Defense Minister Michelle
Alliot-Marie warning Sunday that half of the country's tanks and
helicopters are currently out of service because of a lack of spare
parts.
Chirac
has promised to devote new resources to the armed forces, whose budget
has fallen to 1.8 percent of Gross Domestic Product compared to 2.5
percent in Britain and 3.5 percent in the US. An extra 908 million
euros (899 million dollars) was made available last week by the new
center-right government.
One
of the most important decisions to be taken is whether to built a
second nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to complement France's new
vessel the Charles-de-Gaulle.
Alliot-Marie
said a second ship was required to ensure a permanent presence on the
seas, and that the possibility of cooperating in its construction with
Britain was being explored.