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Two brothers placed under investigation in France for planning antisemitic attack

By Thomson Reuters Mar 15, 2026 | 1:58 PM

PARIS, March 15 (Reuters) – Two young men have been placed under formal investigation in France for planning a “deadly and antisemitic” attack, the counterterrorism prosecutor’s office (PNAT) said in a ​statement on Sunday.

The suspects, a 22-year-old engineering student ‌and an unemployed 20-year-old who are brothers, were arrested last Tuesday after police found a semi-automatic firearm, a bottle of acid and an ISIS flag in their car during a roadside police stop near a prison in ‌northern ​France, PNAT said. It gave no details about ⁠the nature of the ⁠planned attack or its target.

The two are being investigated on charges of criminal terrorist conspiracy and possessing a weapon in connection with a terrorist undertaking, and have been placed in ​pre-trial detention. The PNAT did not release the suspects’ full identities.

Concerns about possible attacks against Jewish communities around the world have ⁠risen following U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran ⁠and a subsequent response from Tehran.

A gunman crashed ​his truck into a Detroit-area synagogue on Thursday, while in Europe ​an explosion caused minor damage to a Jewish school ‌in Amsterdam on Saturday and another explosion caused a fire at a synagogue in Belgium on Monday.

The French interior ministry reinforced security around Jewish places of worship in early March.

The French authorities ⁠said jihadist propaganda was found on the suspects’ digital devices and one of the brothers had filmed a video pledging allegiance to ISIS.

Governments ⁠and human rights ‌advocates have noted a rise in antisemitism, Islamophobia and ⁠anti-Arab bias around the world since the 2023 ​Hamas ‌attack and Israel’s war on Gaza.

France’s human rights ​commission, the ⁠CNCDH, has said antisemitic acts in France tend to increase after Israeli army operations in Palestinian territories. Antisemitic acts surged to a record high after the 2023 Hamas attack, but fell 16% in 2025 compared with the year before.

(Reporting by Layli Foroudi; Editing ​by Edmund Klamann)