A high school student has stabbed a Spanish teacher to death in a school in the French town of Saint-Jean-de-Luz.
A French government spokesperson, Olivier Véran, confirmed Wednesday’s attack and said the perpetrator was 16 years old.
Police attended Saint-Thomas d’Aquin school with the local prosecutor, where the student was arrested.
The French newspaper Sud Ouest said the attacker entered the classroom while the Spanish teacher was giving a class and attacked her.
Local media reported that the teacher was in her fifties when she died of cardiac arrest after emergency services arrived at the school.
French TV station BFM said the attacker locked the classroom door and stabbed the teacher in her chest.
France’s Education Minister, Pap Ndiaye, said in a tweet that his thoughts were with the teacher’s “family, colleagues, and pupils.”
He said he was on his way to the school “straight away.”
Local media reported the student may have been suffering from mental health issues. They said at this stage of the investigation there was no suggestion the incident was terror-related.
In a press conference, Mr. Véran said the government would support educators across the country in the wake of the incident.
“I can hardly imagine the trauma that this represents,” he said.
The school is a private, Catholic establishment near the center of Saint-Jean-de-Luz, a well-known French summer holiday location.
By lunchtime, students who had been told to remain in their classrooms were able to leave the school, and many were collected by their parents.