The Borneo Post (Sabah)

France mourns Paris attack victims, two years on

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PARIS: France marked two years Monday since its worst ever terror attacks, releasing colourful balloons into the sky to remember the 130 people killed on a Friday night out in Paris.

President Emmanuel Macron laid wreaths at the six locations where gunmen and suicide bombers struck on Nov 13, 2015 targeting the national stadium as well as bars, restaurant­s and the Bataclan concert hall.

Two members of Eagles of Death Metal — the California­n band who were on stage at the Bataclan when the carnage began — performed a surprise mini-concert near the venue where 90 people were massacred.

Lead singer Jesse Hughes was visibly moved as he handed white roses to families of the victims after singing ‘Save a Prayer’, the song the band had just finished playing when the gunfire began.

He said he was going through ‘a million different emotions’.

“It is difficult to not to remember the people who were taken from us like our friend Nick Alexander (the band’s merchandis­e manager) and so many others,” Hughes told reporters.

“We watched people give their lives for their friends and we were able to bear witness to that,” he added.

“We have a burden of responsibi­lity to make certain that everyone knows that is the kind of love that exists in this world.”

Macron and his wife Brigitte joined relatives of the victims as they released dozens of multicolou­red balloons in honour of the dead.

“I’ve never been back inside,” said a Bataclan survivor who gave his name only as Patrice.

“But it’s important to come, for all the victims — those who did not come out alive, and all the injured.”

The Paris attacks were among a series of jihadist assaults that have killed more than 240 people in France since 2015, starting with the shooting at satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo.

Macron spoke with victims’ relatives at each of the attack sites — but some refused to meet him in protest at what they say is a lack of government support.

“No one has been speaking to us since Emmanuel Macron got rid of the office for victims’ support,” said Michael Dias, whose father Manuel was killed by a suicide bomber outside the stadium.

“We have been completely left behind,” he told the BFM news channel.

Elisabeth Boissinot, whose daughter Chloe was killed at the Carillon bar, declined her invitation to what she criticised on Facebook as a “victory lap” by the president at the time when she said victims had been ‘forgotten’.

The attacks profoundly shook France, triggering a state of emergency that was lifted only this month after Macron signed a controvers­ial new anti-terror law.

The law gives authoritie­s sweeping powers to search homes, shut down places of worship and restrict the movements of suspected extremists. — AFP

 ??  ?? Photo shows lightened candles, flowers and a paper reading a message which can be translated as ‘and to those who remain, keep going’ at a makeshift memorial outside the Bataclan concert hall in tribute of the victims of the attack. — AFP photo
Photo shows lightened candles, flowers and a paper reading a message which can be translated as ‘and to those who remain, keep going’ at a makeshift memorial outside the Bataclan concert hall in tribute of the victims of the attack. — AFP photo

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