Remy De La Mauvinere / AP
Police and firefighters stand near the building where a suspect in the shootings at a Jewish school in Toulouse, France, was believed to be holed-up.
By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services
Updated at 5:28 a.m. ET: TOULOUSE, France -- A suspect wanted in connection with the killing three children and a rabbi at a Jewish school wounded three police officers in a shootout at a house in Toulouse, France, early Wednesday.
Interior Minister Claude Gueant said the 24-year-old man, who was under siege by hundreds of police officers in an ongoing standoff, claimed to be a member of al-Qaida and that he had shot dead the four out of "revenge for Palestinian children." He is also suspected by authorities of having killed three soldiers of North African origin last week.
Police sources told Reuters that another man had been arrested earlier Wednesday at a separate location in connection with the case.
Several hourse after that�initial raid at about 3 a.m. local time Wednesday (10 p.m. ET Tuesday),�the alleged gunman threw a pistol out the window in exchange for a "communication device" and Gueant said the man had said "he will turn himself in this afternoon."
"He claims to be a mujahedeen and to belong to al-Qaida," Gueant told journalists in Toulouse. "He wanted revenge for the Palestinian children and he also wanted to attack the French army because of its foreign intervention."
Schools throughout France held a moment of silence in memory of the four killed in the Toulouse school shooting. Meanwhile, French police have launched a massive manhunt for the killer. ITN's Martin Geissler reports.
Citing a source close to the investigation, Le Figaro newspaper (in French)�identified the suspect as Mohammed Merah, a French citizen of Algerian descent.
President Nicolas Sarkozy, campaigning for re-election in a presidential poll in five weeks time, has blamed racism for Monday's school attack. His handling of the crisis could be a decisive factor in determining how the French people vote. France has troops in Afghanistan as part of NATO forces.
Tip from motorcycle shop
Gueant, who said Sarkozy had been informed of the raid,�did not say how�authorities had tracked the man down.
However, a Le Figaro correspondent at site of raid reported that police received key tip from a local motorcycle shop in Toulouse a few days ago, according to NBC News. A salesperson�said a man came into the shop to ask how to neutralize the GPS system on his TMX scooter. The salesperson�thought this was�suspicious and reported incident to police, giving a�description of the suspect.
The suspect was apparently already known to French authorities for his radical activities and the investigation�zeroed in on the man and his brother, NBC News said.
Gueant said that when police arrived�to raid the house�"the wanted individual shot at the door." NBC News reported the officers were members of an elite team known as RAID.
All French shooting victims shot in the head at close range, prosecutor says
One officer was injured in the knee and another officer lightly injured in ensuing exchanges of gunfire, Gueant said. A third officer was later reported to have been hurt.
Heavily armed police in bullet-proof vests and helmets cordoned off the area where the raid was taking place, in a suburb�only about 2�miles from the Ozar Hatorah Jewish school where Monday's shootings took place. NBC News reported that 300 officers were participating in the operation.
Suspect's mother called in
The suspect's mother�was brought to the scene to help negotiate with the man, who was holed up in�the small apartment building.
"[She] was asked to make contact with her son, to reason with him, but she did not want to, saying she had little influence on him," Gueant said, according to BBC News.
The suspect inside the house said that he trained in the Pakistan and Afghanistan�and is affiliated with Forca lesa, an Islamic group dismantled by the French government. The group, which recruits young French to join the jihad,�is�considered�to be�dangerous.
On Tuesday, hundreds of�police officers�had spread out across southern France in the hunt for the gunman suspected in three deadly attacks.
Authorities suspect the school killer was also behind two recent attacks in the same area on French paratroopers that left three soldiers dead and one seriously wounded. The victims were of North African and French Caribbean backgrounds.
Sarkozy described the killer as a "monster."
"There are beings who have no respect for life. When you grab a little girl to put a bullet in her head, without leaving her any chance, you are a monster. An anti-Semitic monster, but first of all a monster," he said.
Monday's incident was�the deadliest school shooting in the country and the bloodiest attack on Jewish targets in decades. Schools across the country held a moment of silence Tuesday to honor the victims, who were heading to Israel for burial.
Gueant described the suspect as "someone very cold, very determined, very much a master of his movements, and by consequence, very cruel."
NBC News, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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