According to a police  union spokesman, a Saudi prince was traveling with the motorcade, but  the gunmen appeared to be most interested in the contents of one of the  vehicles, forcing it to a stop by brandishing automatic weapons, but  without firing a shot.
The spokesman described the stolen documents as "sensitive."
The gunmen's car was  later found burned out and with the license plates removed. There was no  sign of the gunmen, and police are investigating.
Le Parisien said  that the attack took place near Porte de la Chapelle in the city's 18th  administrative district and that the gunmen were armed with Kalashnikov  rifles.
The website said Monday  that the convoy of 12 vehicles was traveling from a hotel on the  Champs-Elysees in central Paris to the Paris-Le Bourget Airport --  northeast of the city -- when two cars stopped it, seizing a minivan  containing three people.
Le Monde said  five to eight robbers were involved. The newspaper quoted an  investigator as saying the crime would be more complex if the diplomatic  documents had been its target.
Frederic Lagache, from  the Alliance police union, described the offenders as "a heavily armed  and determined group of individuals," French news agency AFP reported.
Saudi Arabia denied the car was an embassy vehicle.
Its embassy said the car was a rental and the driver was a Saudi citizen who was headed to the airport.
"On the way, the driver was forced to get out the car. The luggage and car were stolen," it said.






 
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