Sarkozy asks Al Jazeera not to broadcast Toulouse video

Al Jazeera has a video of the three deadly shootings in France filmed by the gunman, Mohamed Merah. Police say the shooter may have had an accomplice.

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REUTERS/Kenzo Tribouillard/
France's President Nicolas Sarkozy speaks Tuesday, March 27, 2012 in Paris to magistrates and police involved in the investigations following the shooting of seven persons and in the siege Mohamed Merah's flat in Toulouse.

President Nicolas Sarkozy urged television networks on Tuesday not to broadcast video footage of three deadly shootings in southern France filmed by an Al Qaeda-inspired gunman using a camera strapped to his body.

Qatar-based Al Jazeera received the film at its Paris bureau on a memory stick late on Monday, the network's Paris bureau chief Zied Tarrouche said.

UPDATE:  "Al Jazeera will not air video of French shootings," the Qatar-based news channel said in a headline on its website after Sarkozy's plea.

Gunman Mohamed Merah, 23, told police before he they shot him dead last week that he had recorded the images as he killed three Jewish children, a rabbi and three soldiers at point-blank range in the city of Toulouse and nearby Montauban.

IN PICTURES: French school shooting

The film clips had been edited together with Islamic chants and readings from the Koran, Tarrouche said.

"I call on executives of all TV stations that may have the images in their possession not to broadcast them under any pretext out of respect for the victims and for France," Sarkozy said following a meeting with police chiefs in Paris.

France is still reeling from the shootings a month before a presidential election in which Sarkozy faces an uphill struggle against a Socialist challenger.

Using a stolen scooter and a Colt .45 pistol, Merah carried out the three attacks over eight days before being cornered by police and eventually shot dead by a sniper after a more than 30-hour siege during which he confessed to the murders.

Tarrouche said the video showed all the murders of the soldiers and then the rabbi and the Jewish children, at the entrance to their school shortly before the start of classes.

"You hear the voice of the person who carried out the killings. You also hear the victims' cries," he said. "My feelings are those of any human being who sees horrible things. For me the issue is whether to broadcast this or not."

The CSA broadcast regulator also asked television channels to not broadcast the video images, a spokesman said.

Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said the footage could have a dangerous effect on people inclined to radical violence.

"This incitement to violence, to murder, on minds that are often fragile or deranged, is absolutely detestable," he told Radio Classique.

KILLINGS LOW IN VOTER SURVEYS

Four anti-terrorist judges are heading the investigation into France's worst attack by a radical Islamist in years and are probing Merah's elder brother, Abdelkader, as an accomplice.

Abdelkader, 29 and already known to security services for having helped smuggle Jihadist militants into Iraq in 2007, will remain in jail for the duration of an inquiry that could last months before a decision on whether to send him to trial.

Police believe Mohamed Merah operated largely as a lone wolf although he may have had logistical and ideological support from his brother and possibly others.

Investigators have begun looking for a possible additional accomplice involved in the theft of the scooter Merah used during his attacks, a police source told Reuters. It was also not clear whether the gunman, his brother or someone else had posted the memory stick to Al Jazeera.

French media said the brothers' Algerian father wanted Mohamed's body to be taken to Algeria for burial and that he also planned to take legal action against the French government over his son's death. Sarkozy said he was "outraged".

"Does this man have to be reminded that his son filmed his crimes and took diabolical care to send these ghastly images to a television station?" the president asked.

Sarkozy, who is running for a second term in a two-round election on April 22 and May 6 has seen his opinion poll scores inch up since the attacks, although pollsters expect the focus to soon return to economic issues.

A survey by pollster BVA published in the daily Le Parisien found only 8 percent of respondents said security was an issue that would affect their vote, far behind a string of economic and social issues including purchasing power for 42 percent of respondents and unemployment for 30 percent of them.

The same survey found that 51 percent of voters thought the Toulouse killings would have a major impact on the overall vote, but only 17 percent thought it would impact their own vote. (Reporting by Catherine Bremer, Patrick Vignal, Leigh Thomas and Gwenaelle Barzic; editing by Geert De Clercq and Paul Taylor)

IN PICTURES: French school shooting

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