Islamic State jihadists on Saturday claimed a series of coordinated
attacks by suicide bombers and gunmen in Paris that killed at least 128
people at a concert hall, restaurants and the national sports stadium.
French President Francois Hollande also blamed the Islamic extremist
group and called the coordinated assault on Friday night at six
different sites an "act of war".
At least eight militants, all wearing suicide vests, brought
unprecedented violence to the streets of the French capital in the worst
attacks in Europe since the 2004 Madrid train bombings.
In the bloodiest part of a night of violence, four men armed with
AK47s and shouting "Allahu akbar" stormed into a rock concert at the
Bataclan concert hall in eastern Paris, gunning down at least 82 people
and taking dozens hostage.
"They didn't stop firing. There was blood everywhere, corpses
everywhere. Everyone was trying to flee," said Pierre Janaszak, a radio
presenter who was at the concert by US rock band Eagles of Death Metal.
The gunmen were heard raging at Hollande and his decision in September to begin air strikes on Islamic State jihadists in Syria.
"I clearly heard them say 'It's the fault of Hollande, it's the fault
of your president, he should not have intervened in Syria'," Janaszak
added.
French officials have spoken frequently of their fears that hundreds
of French citizens thought to be fighting with IS in Syria and Iraq
would return to France and launch attacks.
France has taken part in US-led air strikes on IS targets in Iraq for
over a year and in September began bombing the jihadists in Syria,
claiming to have hit a training camp and an oil installation.
In a statement issued online on Saturday morning, Islamic State said
that "eight brothers wearing explosive belts and carrying assault
rifles" conducted a "blessed attack on... Crusader France."
"To teach France, and all nations following its path, that they will
remain at the top of Islamic State’s list of targets, and that the smell
of death won’t leave their noses as long as they partake in their
crusader campaign," said the group, reports Reuters.
The death toll of 128 does not include the eight attackers, the first suicide bombers to strike in France.
The assault also left at least 250 wounded, 100 of them seriously.
Hollande said the multiple attacks across Paris were "an act of
war... committed by a terrorist army, Daesh, against France", using
another term for IS.
France has been on high alert since January when jihadist gunmen
killed 17 people in Paris in attacks targeting satirical magazine
Charlie Hebdo and a Jewish supermarket.
Another disaster was narrowly averted in August when a gunman was overpowered on a packed high-speed train in northern France.
No arrests had been made by early Saturday morning and the country
was in a state of emergency, decreed by Hollande on Friday night.
Police were screening hours of CCTV footage of the attack sites and were attempting to identify the body parts of the attackers.
As a precaution, sports events were cancelled in Paris, while public schools and many museums were closed.
- 'State of emergency decreed -
Hollande himself had to be hastily evacuated from the Stade de France
stadium when suicide bombers struck outside during a friendly football
international between France and Germany.
At first, few of the crowd appeared to grasp the significance of what
was happening and the game continued. When news began filtering in,
people surged on to the turf in chaotic scenes.
US President Barack Obama led a chorus of global condemnation, saying
it was "an attack on all of humanity", and New York lit the new World
Trade Center in the red, white and blue of the French flag in sympathy.
Obama is one of dozens of world leaders expected to attend key UN
climate talks just outside the French capital from November 30.
Authorities had already tightened security at France's borders on Friday, hours ahead of the carnage in Paris.
The worst of the killing occurred at the Bataclan music venue in the
trendy 11th arrondissement where more than 1,000 rock fans were at the
sell-out show.
As screams rang out and survivors ran over the injured or dead to
make their ways to the exits or places to hide, the militants took
hostages and began executing them.
"We heard people screaming -- the hostages particularly -- and the
threats from the kidnappers," said another survivor, 34-year-old
Charles.
Along with around 20 others, he fled to a toilet where he pushed through the ceiling and hid in the cavity.
Three of the militants blew up their explosive belts as heavily armed
anti-terror police raided the venues around 12:30am (2330 GMT), while a
fourth was shot dead.
Another attacker blew himself up in nearby Boulevard Voltaire, as the
streets were filled with the sound of police sirens and convoys of
ambulances shipping hundreds of injured to hospital.
A police officer who took part in the storming of the building told
AFP: "It was horrible inside, a bloodbath, people shot in the head,
people who were shot as they were lying on the ground."
Several restaurants near the concert hall were also targeted,
including a popular Cambodian eatery in the trendy Canal St. Martin
area, where bars and restaurants were thronged with young revellers.
- Global condemnation -
An extra 1,500 soldiers were mobilised to reinforce police in Paris, Hollande's office said.
French media reacted with horror.
"War in central Paris," splashed centre-right daily Le Figaro, with Le Parisien saying: "This time it's war."
Other reactions were a mix of fear and defiance.
Concert-goer Charles, who spoke to AFP at the Bataclan, said he would
refuse to be cowed by the scenes of terror he had experienced.
"Life goes on. We won't give in to fear," he said. "I'm going to a concert on Tuesday. Keep rocking!"
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and European Commission chief
Jean-Claude Juncker said they were "deeply shocked" by the attacks.