the anti-terrorism prosecution takes charge of the investigation into a house damaged by an explosion

the anti-terrorism prosecution takes charge of the investigation into a house damaged by an explosion
the anti-terrorism prosecution takes charge of the investigation into a house damaged by an explosion

The investigation was opened on Sunday for “participation in a correctional terrorist criminal association” and “degrading the property of others by a means dangerous for people in connection with a terrorist enterprise”, specified the Pnat. “The investigations are ongoing and covered by the secrecy of the investigation,” he stressed.

Several tags “FLNC” or even “lingua corsa, lingua viva” (Corsican language, living language, Editor's note) were noted on the walls of the house, the public prosecutor Nicolas Septe said on Sunday, specifying that no one had not been injured.

Unknown to services

The first findings allowed the deminers to find a gas cylinder near the house, “which could explain the phenomenon of explosion of the house by saturation of the air in the house during the fire”, had -he added.

The owners of the house are “unknown to the police. It would be a Corsican couple who have always lived there,” according to Mr. Septe.

Claiming to be “nauseated”, the mother of the owner of the blown up house, Antoinette Lucchinacci, denounced on Facebook “this pathetic and cowardly act” against a family where the children are “in bilingual classes and speak Corsican”, calling on “all nationalist movements to have the courage and honesty to formalize their positions” on these facts.

The two autonomist parties condemned these “unjustifiable” facts, the separatists of Core in Fronte gave their support to the family as did the pro-armed struggle independence party Nazione which sees in these facts a possible “gross manipulation”.

This event comes at a time when several demonstrations and blocking movements punctuated by incidents with the police have recently taken place in Corsica. Several nationalist student unions are protesting against the decision to ban Corsican from the island's assembly under the slogan “lingua corsa, lingua viva”.

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