Dakar Rally: France opens terrorism probe into Saudi Arabia blast

2 years ago 20
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Image source, Reuters

Image caption,

The explosion happened two days before the start of the 2022 Dakar Rally in Saudi Arabia

French prosecutors have opened a terrorism investigation into a blast in Saudi Arabia that badly wounded a French driver in the Dakar Rally.

The explosion damaged a support vehicle for the Sodicars Racing team as it left a hotel in Jeddah last Thursday.

The driver, Philippe Boutron, suffered serious leg injuries. He was later repatriated to France and has been placed in a medically-induced coma.

Saudi authorities have not commented on the French prosecutors' decision.

Saudi police said on Saturday that a preliminary investigation into the explosion had found there was "no criminal suspicion", but rally organiser ASO told reporters that officers had not yet ruled out a "malicious act".

The Dakar Rally, which started in 1978 as a race from Paris to the Senegalese capital, has been held in Saudi Arabia since 2020 for safety reasons.

On Thursday, two days before the start of the event's first stage, a support vehicle belonging to Sodicars was "brought to a sudden halt by a sudden explosion" outside the Donatello Hotel, near Jeddah's international airport, according to ASO.

A Sodicars team member told French sports newspaper L'Equipe that the blast ripped through the floor of the vehicle, which then caught fire. Mr Boutron was injured, but the other five French citizens travelling in the car with him were unharmed.

Mr Boutron, who works in marketing and is also president of French Ligue 2 football team Orléans, underwent surgery in Saudi Arabia before being flown to France for further treatment at the Percy military hospital in Clamart, near Paris.

Sodicars said in a statement on Tuesday that the 61-year-old driver's legs were "bashed up" and that doctors had placed him in a medically-induced coma "in order to alleviate his suffering".

French anti-terrorism prosecutors meanwhile announced they had opened a preliminary investigation into "multiple attempted killings in connection with a terrorist group", without providing further details.

The French foreign ministry also updated its travel advice for Saudi Arabia, warning its citizens to exercise "maximum vigilance" in the wake of the blast.

"An investigation by Saudi authorities is under way to determine the cause of this explosion. The possibility of a criminal act has not been ruled out," it said.

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