
France: Factory attack suspect Yassin Salhi transferred to anti-terror HQ
Yassin Salhi, the 35-year-old suspected of beheading one person and injuring at least two others at a factory compound in Saint-Quentin-Fallavier on Friday, was escorted from Lyon to France's anti-terror headquarters in Levallois-Perret, Sunday.
Salhi, a van driver who worked at the Saint-Quentin-Fallavier factory, is accused of decapitating his boss Herve Cornara. Following the attack, Salhi allegedly attached his employers head to factory's car park fence. He then drove his van packed with highly flammable chemicals at high speed into the factory, injuring himself and two others in the process.
French President Francois Hollande said that the incident was without doubt a "terrorist attack" in a statement made from Brussels, on Saturday, where he was attending a European Council summit. He has also made a statement from the Elysee Palace on his immediate return, announcing that France's national security will remain at the highest alert level.

Yassin Salhi, the 35-year-old suspected of beheading one person and injuring at least two others at a factory compound in Saint-Quentin-Fallavier on Friday, was escorted from Lyon to France's anti-terror headquarters in Levallois-Perret, Sunday.
Salhi, a van driver who worked at the Saint-Quentin-Fallavier factory, is accused of decapitating his boss Herve Cornara. Following the attack, Salhi allegedly attached his employers head to factory's car park fence. He then drove his van packed with highly flammable chemicals at high speed into the factory, injuring himself and two others in the process.
French President Francois Hollande said that the incident was without doubt a "terrorist attack" in a statement made from Brussels, on Saturday, where he was attending a European Council summit. He has also made a statement from the Elysee Palace on his immediate return, announcing that France's national security will remain at the highest alert level.