French school hostage taking ends without incident

11 Jul, 2012

An armed man Tuesday took a parent hostage at a French school in a south-eastern Paris suburb but released his captive after negotiations and was then arrested, police said.
The incident in Vitry-sur-Seine started at around 7:00 am (0500 GMT) when two children and five adults, including two parents, were in the school, which is being used as a leisure centre during the holidays, police said.
All children and adults except for one parent quickly left the school, a judicial source said, denying reports that any children had been briefly taken hostage.
The hostage was released safe and sound. The 31-year-old hostage-taker, a man of African origin, lived near the school and had brandished a "convincing imitation of an automatic pistol," the judicial source said.
"The hostage was freed by the (elite police unit) RAID. Negotiations continued with the hostage-taker. He came out of the site ... and was detained by RAID police. He is uninjured," local prefect Pierre Dartout told journalists.
The judicial source said the man had "made incoherent statements and expressed a desire to die" during negotiations, adding that the hostage-taker had "at no point been threatening" with the parent who was held captive.
He tried to flee when he left the building but was caught, the source added.

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