France suspects pro-Iranian group HAYI was behind foiled attack on Bank of America Paris


A private security member stands outside Bank of America’s Paris offices, after French anti-terrorism prosecutors opened an investigation into attempted destruction by fire or other dangerous means in Paris, France, March 30, 2026. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

PARIS, April 1 (Reuters) - France ⁠suspects a pro-Iranian group known as HAYI to be behind a foiled attack on ⁠Bank of America's Paris offices, its anti-terrorism prosecutor said on Wednesday, although it stressed ‌the link has not yet been formally established.

HAYI, which stands for Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamiyya, or Movement of the Companions of the Right Hand of Islam, had posted a propaganda video on social media on March 23 targeting Jewish interests ​and communities in France and Europe, the prosecutor's office said ⁠in a statement to Reuters.

It added the ⁠video specifically named Bank of America's Paris headquarters in the French capital's 8th district.

"In light of ⁠the ‌aforementioned video targeting this U.S. bank and the modus operandi observed in similar operations across several European countries, this attack... appears to be linked to the HAYI group, although this ⁠has not yet been formally established at this stage of ​the proceedings," the prosecutor's office ‌said.

The Iranian embassy in France did not immediately respond to a request for comment and ⁠declined over the ​weekend to comment on French Interior Minister Laurent Nunez’s remarks pointing to Iran’s possible involvement.

The device used in the foiled March 28 attack, a five-litre petrol can taped to a large pyrotechnic charge, was found by ⁠forensic experts to contain a 650-gram active-material cylinder with a ​fuse, the prosecutor's office said. Paris police found it was the most powerful pyrotechnic device of its kind identified in France to date, it added.

Four suspects, three minors and one adult, were formally placed ⁠under investigation, the prosecutor's office said. A fifth person was released for lack of sufficient evidence.

Investigators established through CCTV footage, phone data and police interviews that the adult had recruited the three teenagers between the nights of March 26 and 27, paying them between 500 and 1,000 euros($580-$1,160) to plant ​the device, light it and film the scene, the prosecutor's office ⁠said.

All four suspects denied terrorist intent, though the minors acknowledged knowing the target was not a residential ​building, it said.

French anti-terrorism prosecutors said they were working with counterparts ‌in Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands on what ​they called HAYI-linked attacks across Europe in March.

Investigators' priority is now to identify the masterminds behind the attack, prosecutors said.

($1 = 0.8618 euros)

(Reporting by Mathieu Rosemain; Editing by Toby Chopra)

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