At least 128 people killed in Paris terror attacks
PARIS: At least 128 people were killed in a series of terror attacks in Paris on Friday (Nov 13), according to a source at the prosecutor's office.
Police said around 100 people were killed at the Bataclan music venue in eastern Paris alone, with reports saying armed attackers shot dead people attending a rock concert one by one before police stormed the building.
Reports said four men who attacked the Bataclan concert hall were themselves killed when police stormed the building, including three who activated explosive belts. In total, eight militants were killed in the attacks, according to an investigation source.
Three more died near the national stadium and a fourth was killed in a street in eastern Paris.
180 people are injured, with 99 critically injured, a source close to the investigation told Reuters.
Paris prosecutors said their investigation would allow them to see if any "accomplices or co-authors are on the loose". An initial investigation has been opened for "killings in relation to a terrorist enterprise", said chief prosecutor Francois Molins, adding there were at least seven attackers in total.
One witness said an attacker had earlier yelled "Allahu akbar" ("God is greatest") and fired into the crowd at the concert given by US rock band Eagles of Death Metal.
It was one of a series of attacks at seven locations across Paris in an unprecedented night of carnage in the French capital that is still recovering from militant attacks in January.
The Bataclan lies just 200 metres from the former offices of the Charlie Hebdo magazine which was one of the targets of those attacks.
"There are lots of people here. I don't know what's happening, a sobbing witness who gave her name only as Anna told French news channel BFM TV outside the Bataclan hall. "It's horrible. There's a body over there. It's horrible."
It quickly became clear that Friday's attacks would be much bloodier.
In addition to the carnage at the concert hall, at least five people were also killed in three explosions near the Stade de France national stadium in the north of the capital where France were playing Germany in an international football match, security sources said.
One of the explosions was caused by a suicide bomber, witnesses said.
President Francois Hollande was attending the match and had to be hastily evacuated.
Another attack was reported at a Cambodian restaurant called Petit Cambodge, not far from the Bataclan venue in northeast Paris, where witnesses said gunmen armed with Kalashnikov assault rifles had fired at diners through the plate-glass windows, causing multiple casualties.
"Terrorist attacks of an unprecedented level are underway across the Paris region," Hollande said in an emotional televised message. "It's a horror," he said.
Hollande declared a state of emergency across the entire country and cancelled his trip to the G20 summit due to take place in Turkey at the weekend.
CONCERT HALL HORROR
The focus of the attacks was the Bataclan. Armed police eventually stormed the venue at around 2335 GMT, accompanied by a series of explosions.
Police said around 100 were dead.
"I saw 20 to 25 bodies lying on the floor and people were very badly injured, gunshot wounds," Julien Pierce, a witness at the Bataclan, told Europe 1 radio. "Some of them were dead. Some of them were very badly wounded, but it was a bloodbath."
Hollande declared a state of emergency across the entire country and said the borders had been closed. The military had been mobilised to reinforce police and ensure no further attacks took place, he said.
"We must ensure that no one comes in to commit any act whatsoever, and at the same time make sure that those who have committed these crimes should be arrested if they try to leave the country, he added.
Counter-terrorism prosecutors said they had opened a preliminary investigation.
'THEY OPENED FIRE'
At the Stade de France, spectators flooded the pitch as news of the attacks spread before organisers started an evacuation.
The mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, called for residents to stay at home.
"We heard gunfire, 30 seconds of fire, it was interminable, we thought it was fireworks," said Pierre Montfort, who lives near rue Bichat, where the Cambodian restaurant is located.
"Everyone was on the floor, no one moved," said another eyewitness who had been at the Petit Cambodge restaurant. "A girl was carried by a young man in his arms. She appeared to be dead."
The toll "will be much heavier" than the initial confirmed deaths, a security source said. Camille, 25, said: "My sister is in the Bataclan. I phoned her. She said they opened fire. And then she hung up."
"I was on my way to my sister's when I heard shots being fired. Then I saw three people dead on the ground, I know they were dead because they were being wrapped up in plastic bags," student Fabien Baron told Reuters.
An AFP reporter outside the Bataclan said before the police stormed the venue, hundreds of officers carrying machine-guns were keeping guard and more than 20 police wagons with their lights flashing were at the scene.
President Francois Hollande and Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve announced that a crisis cell had been set up.
"The president of the Republic, the prime minister, the interior minister are in a inter-ministerial crisis cell," the government said in a statement.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and European Union chief Jean-Claude Juncker said they were "deeply shocked" by the attacks.
The Vatican has also condemned the killings in Paris as "mad terrorist violence" and called for a decisive response to counter the spread of "homicidal hatred".
"We condemn (it) in the most radical way together with the pope and all those who love peace," Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said in a statement.
Top Sunni cleric Ahmed al-Tayyeb has also condemned the attacks, saying at a conference that they "denounced this hateful incident", and added that "the time had come for the world to unite to confront this monster".
France has been on high alert since the militant attacks in January against the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine and a Jewish supermarket that left 17 dead.
Several other attacks have been foiled through the year.
More than 500 French fighters are thought to be with Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, according to official figures, while 250 have returned and some 750 expressed a desire to go there.
The government announced last week that it was restoring border checks as a security measure for UN climate talks that start in Paris at the end of this month.
- AFP/Reuters/ec
Vive la France!
Following Paris attacks, public pay tribute at French embassy in Singapore
SINGAPORE: The French embassy in Singapore became a tribute site for the public to place flowers and messages of support to the people of Paris, in light of terror attacks that rocked the capital of France.
A number of people - including French nationals and Singaporeans – on Sunday (Nov 15) placed bouquets of flowers outside the building at Cluny Park Road in memory of the 129 people killed in the terror attacks. They were accompanied by messages of support, such as “Pray for Paris” and “We Love Paris”.
Channel NewsAsia understands that the embassy will hold a remembrance event on Monday evening to pay tribute, and as an act of solidarity.
“It's a really, really horrible and tough time for everybody there,” said Ms Farida Brouwer, a French national who is working and living in Singapore. "And it's not what Paris is about, it's not what that country is about. It's about being equal, being free and being brothers and sisters.”
Ms Beatrice Leong, a Singaporean student who was at the embassy with her mother, added: “As human beings, we are able to relate to the pain of losing a loved one. I came to pay tribute.”
Three teams of gunmen on Friday attacked some of Paris' most popular nightspots, including a sold-out concert hall, restaurants and bars and outside France's national stadium. The Islamic State militant group has claimed responsibility for the assaults.
- CNA/xq