The BBC has an article about (for once) some gub attacks not in the United States:
A manhunt has been launched in Paris after a gunman attacked offices of the newspaper Liberation and fired outside the headquarters of the Societe Generale bank.Rico says when someone enters any office with a gub, it's serious...
A photographer, 27, was seriously hurt at Liberation. The gunman later forced a motorist to drive him to the Champs Elysees before letting him go.
Police are looking for the same man, who broke into the Paris offices of the 24-hour news channel BFMTV on Friday. Police have now been stationed outside all the main media offices in Paris.
At a news conference investigators held up two images, one of the suspect in a street and another picture, from BFMTV surveillance cameras, which was earlier shown on Le Parisien's website.
Paris prosecutor Francis Molins said that a lone gunman appeared to be behind the three attacks and the hijacking. He said the suspect had not yet been identified and the motive was still unclear. The man is said to be between 40 and 45, and shaven-headed.
The BBC's Christian Fraser in Paris says the gunman had walked into BFMTV on Friday morning and emptied the chamber of his gun in the reception area. "Next time, I will not miss you," the man had said to an editor he threatened.
For a time on Monday, a police helicopter hung over the Champs Elysees amid fears the gunman might be heading towards the Eiffel Tower, but it is speculated that he might have gone into the Metro. People have been encouraged to stay indoors. Police say the suspect is calm and assured, our correspondent reports, and each time has walked away from the scene of his attacks.
French media say the suspect told the motorist he hijacked that he was armed with grenades. President Francois Hollande, who is in Israel, said the priority was "to stop an individual who had tried to kill, and could try to kill again".
At 10:15 local time on Monday, the gunman entered the Paris offices of Liberation, near the Place de la Republique in the east of the city, and opened fire. Liberation Deputy Editor Francois Sergent said: "It was [the photographer's] first day working for Liberation." The shooter injured a photographer in the chest and stomach before escaping. Liberation said three spent cartridges had been found. The gunman did not say anything during the attack, Liberation reported.
Some two hours later, the Banque Societe Generale confirmed that a man opened fire outside its headquarters in the western business district of La Defense. No one was injured, the bank said. One witness of the bank shooting told Le Figaro that he heard a large bang and saw a man wearing a khaki coat and a cap and carrying a shotgun. The gunman's second shot caused panic, and the man then disappeared down some stairs on to a street, the witness said. Another witness, Pierre-Albert Garcias, said: "We thought it was an explosion at first, it didn't sound like gunshots. I turned around and the man was in front of me, ten meters away. He was actually reloading his gun. So we all ran for cover, we got down on our stomachs behind a wall."
The president of Liberation, Nicolas Demorand, described the attack as "very, very serious".
The gunman hijacked a car to the Champs Elysees, and is believed to have escaped.
Police say the gunman then hijacked a car in Nanterre, close to La Defense, and forced the driver to take him to the Champs Elysees, where he was dropped near the Metro station George V.
Liberation's deputy editor Fabrice Tassel said the victim there was fighting for his life.
The victim, who has not been named, was said to be a freelance assistant photographer who had just arrived at the newspaper office to work on a fashion photoshoot.
Police have sealed off the area around Liberation's offices. Interior Minister Manuel Valls has visited the scene, along with Culture Minister Aurelie Filippetti and the mayor of Paris, Bertrand Delanoe. Valls said: "As long as this person is still on the loose and we do not know the motives, this represents a threat. We must move fast."
Liberation's publisher Nicolas Demorand said: "In a democracy, when someone enters a newspaper office with a gun, this is very, very serious, whatever the person's mental state."
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