French jihadist police killer 'obeyed Islamic State call' Published duration 14 June 2016

image copyright AFP image caption Jean-Baptiste Salvaing (R) and Jessica Schneider: Victims of an IS-inspired stabbing

The man who killed a French police couple at their home near Paris was acting on a call from so-called Islamic State (IS) to "kill infidels", officials say.

Larossi Abballa, who was killed in a shootout with police, was loyal to IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, they said.

A police commander and his partner were stabbed to death at their home. Their three-year-old son survived.

IS has put out a video showing Abballa confessing to the killings.

The 11-minute video, on the IS news agency Amaq, apparently shows him in the home of the couple before police stormed in.

In it Abballa, 25, urged Muslims in France to target police officers, prison guards, journalists, politicians and mayors. He named several prominent French journalists.

He said he was heeding a call by IS spokesman Abu Mohammed al-Adnani, who issued a message before the start of Ramadan inciting Muslims to target civilians in Europe and the US.

The video is apparently the same as one that Abballa posted on Facebook Live, hours before police killed him, in which he swore allegiance to IS.

Abballa's crime was "a terrorist act", President Francois Hollande said, and France still faced "a significant threat".

The attack happened in Magnanville, about 55km (35 miles) north-west of the French capital.

image copyright Larossi Abballa - Facebook image caption Larossi Abballa, who carried out the attack, was sentenced to jail in 2013 over his links to jihadist groups

image copyright AFP image caption Hours after the shootout there was a heavy police presence in the leafy suburb of Magnanville

During negotiations prior to the police assault on Monday, Abballa said he had pledged his loyalty to the IS leader three weeks earlier.

About 20:30 local time (18:30 GMT) Monday - Abballa ambushes the police commander, stabbing him nine times, police say

local time (18:30 GMT) Monday - Abballa ambushes the police commander, stabbing him nine times, police say Abballa enters the man's home, taking his partner, herself a policewoman, and their young son hostage

20:52 - Abballa claims the attack in a live Facebook post

- Abballa claims the attack in a live Facebook post 21:30 - elite anti-terror police arrive at the house and a siege starts

- elite anti-terror police arrive at the house and a siege starts About midnight - police assault after Abballa threatened to blow the place up.

When police stormed in they killed Abballa and found the dead woman, whose throat had been slashed. The little boy was in a state of shock.

French media are naming them as Jean-Baptiste Salvaing, 42, and Jessica Schneider, 36.

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls called the attack "a watershed in terms of horror - the home, the intimate life of a family, of a couple of civil servants, was targeted".

In 2013, Abballa was jailed for recruiting fighters for jihad in Pakistan.

He had been under recent police surveillance, including a wiretap. Three people linked to Abballa have been arrested and placed in custody.

In the video - later removed from Facebook - Abballa considers what to do with the couple's son, according to French jihad expert David Thomson, who watched it.

image copyright Twitter image caption According to David Thomson, at one point during the Facebook Live video: "The baby is behind him, on the sofa. After killing his parents he says: 'I don't know yet what I'm going to do with him'"

"I don't know yet what I'm going to do with him," the killer is heard saying.

He also made a threatening reference to the Euro 2016 football tournament.

media caption President Hollande: "Unquestionably a terrorist act"

image copyright AFP image caption Officers of an elite police unit stormed the house in Magnanville

France has been under a state of emergency since the Paris attacks of 13 November 2015 in which IS jihadists killed 130 people.

That state of emergency is still in place. France is on high alert as it hosts the Euro tournament, which started last Friday.

image copyright Reuters image caption Video from the scene shows heavily armed police arriving