A Malian described as a "hero" after he
helped hostages at a Jewish supermarket hide during last week's Paris attacks
will be awarded French nationality Tuesday, Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve
said.
Lassana
Bathily, who has lived in France since 2006 and applied for French nationality
in July of last year, was praised for his "bravery" in a statement by
Cazeneuve, which also said the 24-year-old Malian's naturalisation will be
granted at a ceremony on Tuesday.
As the
hostage-taking siege by jihadist Amedy Coulibaly began January 9, Bathily -- an
employee at the kosher store in eastern Paris -- ushered a group of trapped
customers into a cold storage room, shut off the refrigeration system, and
closed the terrified people inside for protection.
"I
heard shots and I saw my colleagues and clients running down," Bathily
recalled later. "I told them 'Come, come,' (and) got them into the
freezer."
Bathily
proposed helping the hiding clients escape the supermarket through its delivery
lift. But when no one wanted to take that risk, Bathily fled alone, flagged
down the police, and provided them information on the layout of the store that
was vital to the assault that ended the siege.
A practising
Muslim whose heroism drew wide praise -- and 220,000 signatures on an online
petition calling for his naturalisation -- Bathily has said his actions were
those that any human should take for others facing threats from a common enemy.
"We're
brothers. It's not a question of Jews, Christians or Muslims," he told
French news channel BFMTV. "We're all in the same boat, and we have to
help one another to get out of this crisis."
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