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Car explodes after hitting police van on Paris's Champs-Elysees

Pierre-Henry Brandet said police had pulled the driver out of the flaming vehicle and he was "very likely dead."

Authorities quickly sealed off the world-famous Champs-Elysees avenue after a 31-year-old man on a jihadist watchlist rammed a car loaded with guns and a gas bottle into a police

Interior ministry spokesman Pierre-Henry Brandet said police had pulled the driver out of the flaming vehicle and he was "very likely dead."

Police had said earlier that the driver of the Renault Megane was "seriously injured" and "on the ground... unconscious."

No police or bystanders were injured in the incident near the Grand Palais exhibition hall.

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"Apparently, it's a deliberate act," a source close to the investigation said.

Anti-terrorism prosecutors have opened an investigation.

Police have closed two of the metro stations on the Champs-Elysees, a major tourist draw in the French capital.

The incident came just two months after a policeman was shot and killed on the world-renowned avenue, three days before the first round of France's presidential election.

A note praising the Islamic State group was found next to the body of the gunman, Karim Cheurfi, in that incident.

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Police later found other weapons in Cheurfi's car including a shotgun and knives.

String of attacks

The incident on Monday was the latest in a string of attacks in London and Paris.

Two weeks ago jihadists used a van and knives to crush and kill eight people enjoying a night out in the British capital. Three of the victims were French.

Four days later, a hammer-wielding Algerian man was shot and wounded by police after he struck an officer on the head in front of Notre Dame cathedral in Paris.

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In a video found at his home, he had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group.

In London on Monday, a van ploughed into a crowd of Muslims near a London mosque early on Monday, leaving one person dead and injuring 10 others in the second terror attack this month in the British capital.

France is still under a state of emergency imposed after the November 2015 attacks in Paris, when Islamic State jihadists killed 130 people in a night of carnage at venues across the city.

Previous major attacks targeted the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine in January 2015 and in November that year, gunmen and suicide bombers attacked venues around Paris including the Bataclan concert hall, killing 130 people in all.

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