Monday, December 23, 2024

Rail sabotage plays havoc on opening day of Paris Olympics

(BBC News) Everything was in place.

Streets in the centre of Paris have been blocked off, metro stations closed, and thousands of police, soldiers, and other guards deployed to maintain security on the big showpiece day to kick off the Olympics.

But saboteurs struck away from the capital, at five apparently unguarded places.

France’s state-owned rail company SNCF says the saboteurs either vandalized or tried to vandalize five signal boxes and electricity installations between 01:00 and 05:30 on Friday.

One site was at Courtalain, east of Le Mans and 150 km to the southwest of Paris. The local community’s social media page posted a picture of burnt-out cables in a shallow gully, with its protective SNCF paving stones discarded.

SNCF spoke of a “massive, large-scale attack aimed at paralyzing” its services, involving arson and theft targeting cabling, not just at Courtalain but at Pagny-sur-Moselle, a village outside the eastern city of Metz and Croisilles, not far from the northern city of Arras.

Small sites, but at big junctions on the high-speed TGV network.

Another attempted attack, on another TGV junction to the southeast of Paris at Vergigny, was foiled by SNCF workers who just happened to be carrying out maintenance on site in the early hours of Friday.

The sabotage was clearly co-ordinated and the effects were immediate, on one of the busiest days imaginable for France’s highly regarded rail system.

The head of SNCF, Jean-Pierre Farandou, has spoken of a “premeditated, calculated, co-ordinated” attack that demanded considerable repair work.

Friday, July 26, marks the start of the grand départ or big getaway for many French holidaymakers heading out of the cities. It is also the day of the showpiece opening ceremony that Paris Olympics organizers have worked on for years.

Hundreds of stranded passengers filled the main concourses at Gare Du Nord and Gare Montparnasse, two of the big rail hubs in Paris for travellers on the big lines to the north and west of the capital.

Passengers at Gare du Nord waited patiently for news about delayed trains, not just within France but to London, Brussels, and Amsterdam.

The much-vaunted high-speed TGV network heading in and out of Paris – north to Lille, west to Le Mans and east towards Strasbourg – was down.

Map of France

At the nearby Gare de L’Est, which serves the east, an SNCF official said they were making plans to put the high-speed TGV trains onto other, slower lines, which would mean long delays and disruptions, but would also keep the network moving.

By the afternoon, trains in all three directions were slowly resuming, but with limited services, delays of up to two hours, and still cancellations.

SNCF said on X that teams were working toward a “gradual recovery”, and signal experts were testing each damaged cable.

“Everything points us to these fires being deliberate,” said Transport Minister Patrice Vergriete. “The timing [of the attacks], the vans that have been recovered after people have fled, the incendiary agents found on the scene.”

Clearly acts of sabotage, and evidently timed to cause severe disruption on the day that Paris is trying to show its best face to the world.

Caretaker Prime Minister Gabriel Attal said the repercussions for the rail network were massive and serious, and France’s intelligence services and forces of order had been deployed to “find and punish those behind these criminal acts.”

French authorities have been on alert for potential acts of sabotage targeting the Games for months.

During the spring, they warned that several groups had tried to disrupt Olympic events, including the torch relay that has been going on across France in the run-up to the opening ceremony.

It has emerged that incendiary devices were found on the high-speed TGV line between Aix-en-Provence and Marseille on the day the Olympic flame arrived in France’s big southern port on May 8.

Several bottles filled with yellow liquid were found 4 km outside Aix, according to French TV.

Who would want to ruin the plans of hundreds of thousands of French travellers and disrupt the start of the Olympic Games?

One security source suggested in French media that the arson attacks bore all the hallmarks of the extreme left.

However, Attal has refused to speculate who might have been behind the sabotage.

He appealed to the public to be cautious as the investigation is just starting, although he did say the fact that the saboteurs had targeted “nerve centres” on the high-speed network indicated awareness of where it was vulnerable to attack.

In recent weeks, Russia has been linked to at least two alleged plots in France.

Last month, a Russian-Ukrainian national was arrested at a hotel near Charles de Gaulle airport on suspicion of being part of a Russian sabotage campaign.

This week, a Russian man was arrested on suspicion of involvement in a “destabilization” plot targeting the Games.

Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said he was suspected of aiming to “organize operations of destabilization, interference, spying” on behalf of Russia’s FSB intelligence service.

So far, no Russian link has been made by French authorities to Friday’s attacks.

Darmanin said this month that 3,570 people had been barred from the Games, including people seen as security risks, as well as “dozens of radical individuals close to Islamist, ultra-left, and ultra-right circles.”

Almost one million people, ranging from athletes and coaches to Olympic volunteers, have gone through a security check ahead of the Games in Paris.

But preventing acts of sabotage at unguarded sites in rural areas is a different prospect.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c28eyr3y18yo

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