A far right white nationalist suspected of shooting dead former star Argentine rugby player Federico Martin Aramburu in Paris at the weekend was arrested in Hungary overnight, French prosecutors said Wednesday.
Loik Le Priol, a 27-year-old former soldier and member of the extreme-right "Groupe Union Défense" (GUD) movement, is believed to have fired the fatal shot in Paris after an altercation in a cafe.
Another far-right supporter who also fired on Aramburu remains on the run.
A source close to the investigation told AFP that Le Priol had been arrested near Hungary's border with Ukraine.
The killing occurred in the chic Saint-Germain district on the Left Bank of the French capital in the early hours of Saturday morning after Aramburu and friends became embroiled in an argument at a bar.
#UPDATE A far-right white nationalist suspected of shooting dead former star Argentine rugby player Federico Martin Aramburu in Paris at the weekend was arrested in Hungary overnight, French prosecutors said Wednesdayhttps://t.co/TWtNdbmBOb#AFPSports
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) March 23, 2022
The row at the Mabillon cafe at around 6am on Saturday saw bouncers separate two groups, according to investigators.
After leaving the scene, two men are believed to have returned and fired several shots from a car at Aramburu, a 42-year-old former Argentina international, who died at the spot.
A 24-year-old woman arrested on Monday, who is believed to have driven the car, has already been charged as an accomplice to murder.
'Clearly unstable'
Le Priol, a former marine commando, was already known to authorities for his radical views and violent past.
He is already being prosecuted over an alleged group assault in 2015 against a fellow member of GUD, a video of which was obtained by investigative journalism website Mediapart.
An active, structured far-right student group from the late 1960s to the 80s, GUD has shrunk to something more like a "gang ... about 10 people" said Jean-Yves Camus, a political scientist specialising in the far right.
The French Navy told AFP that Le Priol was discharged for disciplinary reasons, having earlier developed post-traumatic stress following operations in Mali and Djibouti in 2013-15.
The weekly Marianne reported that he had already been convicted twice of assault and once for drink driving.
In 2016, Le Priol launched a line of white nationalist clothing.
"Everyone who knew Loik thought he had calmed down... last time I saw him in Paris, he had a girlfriend, life plans, seemed peaceful. We were happy that 'he was doing better'," YouTuber Julien Rochedy, who posed with one of the T-shirts, wrote on Twitter.
"The extraordinary thing about the Le Priol case is that he was known for a long time as an individual capable of unrestrained violence," Camus said.
"He was known to be especially impossible to control, including with his own buddies.... why did the military allow someone to join who was clearly unstable?" he asked.
(With AFP)