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SICK ISIS supporters have celebrated the Nice and Avignon terror attacks with a horrific poster of a blood-soaked corpse.

The latest attacks in France are "already being celebrated massively across jihadi communities" according to the SITE Intelligence monitoring group. 

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Sick ISIS supporters are already celebrating the French terror attacks
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Sick ISIS supporters are already celebrating the French terror attacksCredit: siteintelgroup.com
Three people were killed in the bloody rampage as the suspected terrorist stormed the Basilica of Notre-Dame in Nice
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Three people were killed in the bloody rampage as the suspected terrorist stormed the Basilica of Notre-Dame in NiceCredit: EPA
Brahim Aoussaoui, a 21-year-old Tunisian migrant suspected of murdering three church-goers, has been pictured for the first time
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Brahim Aoussaoui, a 21-year-old Tunisian migrant suspected of murdering three church-goers, has been pictured for the first time

The poster, shared online, followed warnings of further terrorist atrocities just days before the rampage.

Al-Qaeda published a press release calling for 'jihad' or a 'holy war' over newspaper Charlie Hebdo's cartoons of the Propet Mohammed.  

SITE director Rita Katz said it was "hard to recall social media celebration this massive for terrorism" with jihadists taking to Twitter after the latest murders.

Tensions have been high between France and various Muslim countries following the beheading of Samuel Paty after showing Prophet Mohammed cartoons in his classroom.

Katz said that jihadists were celebrating the attackers' "freedom of action" following the recent decapitations and stabbings across France.

A beheaded woman was among three killed by a Tunisian migrant in a bloody rampage in a church in Nice - as France was rocked by two 'terror' attacks in one day.  

Police sources named the suspect in the Nice attack as Brahim Aoussaoui, a 21-year-old Tunisian who had arrived in Europe just weeks ago and has been pictured for the first time.

CHURCH SLAUGHTER

France's state prosecutor said tonight that the killer used a 12-inch knife to slaughter three church-goers and is in hospital with serious injuries after being shot by cops.

He landed in late September on the Italian island of Lampedusa, where he was placed in virus quarantine by authorities, before arriving in France this month.

The first victim in the Nice attack has since been named as Vincent Loquès, who is understood to have been the church warden.

Loquès, a dad-of-two, was the building's 54-year-old sacristan, an officer charged with taking care of the church.

The body of a second victim, a 60-year-old woman, was found strangled and decapitated in the church.

A third victim, a 44-year-old woman, fled from the church at 8.54am but died in a cafe nearby from her wounds .

The suspect changed his clothes after arriving in Nice by train before arriving at the church at 8.29am before butchering the three church-goers over half an hour.

A team of four local police officers stormed the church through a side entrance and shot the terrorist as he yelled "Allahu akbar".

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is VP-MAP-FRANCE-ATTACKS-v2.jpg
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The attacker was taken to hospital with serious wounds and operated on as anti-terrorist police launched an investigation into the bloody rampage.

Katz said: "These new attacks come amid a massive and enduring wave of jihadi media condemning France and its cartoonists."

Extremists have shown their pleasure at the recent attacks in France and Saudi Arabia - with one picture showing a bleeding corpse covered by a French flag.

Katz added that the "prospect of co-ordination" between the various attackers seemed "increasingly plausible," although not confirmed. 

The most recent vicious incident saw three people killed as the suspected terrorist stormed the Basilica of Notre-Dame in Nice.

Separate suspects are understood to have launched attacks in Nice and Avignon as France was rocked by a day of violence.

French soldiers and policemen secure the site of a knife attack in Nice
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French soldiers and policemen secure the site of a knife attack in NiceCredit: AFP or licensors
President Emmanuel Macron denounced the attack in Nice as an 'Islamic terror attack'
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President Emmanuel Macron denounced the attack in Nice as an 'Islamic terror attack' Credit: EPA

Elsewhere, there have been at least three other incidents as French president Emmanuel Macron described his country as "under attack".

It was reported a after telling his family he wanted to copy the attack in Nice, while another man was arrested while he was about to board a tram armed with a 12inch knife.

Also, a security guard at the French Consulate in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, was stabbed as anti-France sentiment rages across many Muslim nations.

Macron denounced the Nice bloodbath as an "Islamic terror attack" and defiantly said the nation would not "give up on our values".

The president announced up to 7,000 soldiers will be deployed to the streets across France in the wake of the violence to protect landmarks, schools and places of worships.

Meanwhile, leaders in Muslim countries have shown their outrage with France and President Macron.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accused Europe of treating Muslims like how the Nazis "lynched" Jews following the Mohammed cartoon row.

He has also called for a boycott of French goods, called European leaders "fascists," and said Muslims are "now subjected to a lynch campaign similar to that against Jews in Europe before World War II."

The attack comes after he verbally bashed French President Emmanuel Macron over his tough stance on Islamic extremism following the beheading of Samuel Paty.

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The teacher was brutally murdered by a jihadi in the streets of Paris after showing his schoolchildren cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.

The 47-year-old teacher was posthumously given the Legion d'Honneur - France’s highest award - and Macron insisted the country would "not give up our cartoons".

Police stand guard outside Notre-Dame in Nice
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Police stand guard outside Notre-Dame in Nice
A parishioner wearing a cross weeps outside the church
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A parishioner wearing a cross weeps outside the church
French President Emmanuel Macron and Nice Mayor Christian Estrosi visit the scene
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French President Emmanuel Macron and Nice Mayor Christian Estrosi visit the scene
French President Emmanuel Macron says 'France is under attack' after Nice and Avignon knife rampages
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