Fast facts in the 2015 Paris terrorist attacks | CNN



CNN

Here’s a look at the terrorist attacks in Paris in November 2015 that killed 130 and injured 494 Attacker, Armed with assault rifles and explosives, they targeted six locations across the city. Isis Claimed responsibility for the attacks.

Stade de France
– Around 9:20 a.m. – An explosion occurs outside the Stade de France, a sports stadium in Saint-Denis, a suburb north of Paris. French President Francois Hollande Watching France play Germany in a football match. He has been taken out safely. As the attacks continued over the next three hours, Hollande declared a state of emergency, closing the country’s borders.

– 9:30 pm – There was a second explosion outside the stadium. Both explosions took place at the Avenue Jules Rimet.

– 9:53 p.m. – The third explosion occurs on the rue de la Cocherie, about 400 meters from the Stade de France.

– A total of four people were killed: three suicide bombers and one pedestrian.

La Petit Combos and Le Carillon
– 9:25 p.m. – Gunmen armed with assault rifles kill 15 people at the intersection of rue Alibert and rue Bichat in the 10th district of Paris. Many of the victims gathered at Le Petit Combos, a restaurant, and Le Carillon, a bar.

coffee good beer
– 9:32 pm – Five people are killed in a shootout outside Café Bonne Bire at the corner of rue de la Fontaine au Roi and rue du Faubourg du Temple in the 11th district of Paris.

great team
– 9:36 a.m. – The attackers arrived at the restaurant La Belle Equipe at 92 Rue de Charonne. The gunmen attacked the people sitting outside the restaurant. Nineteen people are killed.

Voltaire Counter
– 9:40 pm – A suicide bomber blew himself up inside the restaurant Comptaire Voltaire at 253 Boulevard Voltaire, 11th District.

– One person inside the restaurant is seriously injured and several others are slightly injured.

bataclan
– 9:40 a.m. – Three attackers armed with assault weapons arrive at the Batalan concert hall. Gunmen entered the small concert hall and opened fire during a performance by the American band Eagles of Death Metal.

Ninety people have been killed.

– 12:20 am – French police storm Bataclan. Three terrorists were killed in police retaliation.

14 November 2015 – In an online statement, ISIS took responsibility

November 15-16, 2015 – French fighter jets bombed several ISIS targets in Raqqa, Syria. France has been carrying out airstrikes on ISIS targets since September as part of a US-led coalition, but analysts say the timing of the new air strikes is not a coincidence.

16 November 2015 – In a speech to a joint session of Parliament, Hollande urged lawmakers to approve a three-month extension of the state of emergency in the country, With new laws that would allow authorities to take away citizenship from terrorists of French origin and provisions that make it easier to deport suspected terrorists.

18 November 2015 – French authorities raid an apartment building In the northern Paris suburb of Saint-Denis. The apartment is an alleged hideout of the suspected kingpin of the attacks. During the raid, a suicide device detonates and bullets are exchanged for about an hour. One floor of the building collapsed, and three people died.

November 19, 2015 – It is confirmed that the body of Abdelhamid Aboud, The mastermind of the Paris attacks was found in the rubble of the apartment that was raided on 18 November. A female relative of Aboud, Hasna Ait Boulasen, was also killed in the raid. The third person killed has not been identified, who is believed to have detonated the suicide device.

November 20, 2015 – French Prime Minister Manuel Valls announced that the death toll had risen to 130. Additionally, he says that in the last seven days, 793 searches were conducted across France. During these searches, 174 weapons have been seized and 107 people have been detained.

November 23, 2015 – In Belgium, authorities charge a suspect, Arrested during raids in the last 24 hours, as well as participating in the activities of a terrorist group in connection with the Paris attacks.

November 23, 2015 – France launched its first air strike against ISIS from an aircraft carrier. With the addition of carrier-based aircraft to its fleet, France now has 38 aircraft carrying out bombing operations against ISIS.

17 December 2015 – Officials briefed on the investigation told CNN Terrorists used encrypted apps including Telegram and WhatsApp, To plan attacks.

18 March 2016 – suspect Salah Abdeslam is wounded and captured After a gun battle with the officers in Belgium. Four others have also been arrested in anti-terrorist raids.

8 April 2016 – In Belgium, suspect Mohamed Aberini has been arrested along with two others during a police sweep in the Anderlech district of Brussels.

November 8, 2016 – French officials told CNN they had identified the suspected coordinator of the attacks as Osama Attar. He is believed to have directed the Paris attacks and the Brussels attacks on 22 March. 32 people were killed and more than 300 were injured in the attacks in the Belgian capital.

12 November 2016 – A day before the first anniversary of the Paris terror attack, bataclan reopened With a performance of Sting.

23 April 2018 – Salah Abdeslam, the sole survivor of the cell, allegedly carried out the attacks, sentenced to 20 years In a shootout with Belgian police in March 2016. A spokesman for the Brussels prosecutor says he has been found guilty of attempted murder in a “terrorist context”.

June 27, 2019 – German authorities report that a week ago a 39-year-old Bosnian was arrested in connection with the 2015 attack. He will be extradited to Belgium.

November 4, 2019 – French investigation into attacks ends. Prosecutors have one month to present their case before judges set a date for trial. Of the 14 accused, 11 are in custody.

March 16, 2020 – Twenty people, including Abdeslam, have been ordered to stand trial for the attacks.

September 8, 2021 – The trial begins for the twenty persons involved in the attacks, including Abdeslam. The trial is expected to last nine months, involving about 1,800 plaintiffs and more than 300 lawyers.

Pictures of victims can be found Here And Here.

Abdelhamid Aboud:
– Deceased. He was killed during a raid on an apartment building in the northern Paris suburb of Saint-Denis on 18 November.
– Citizen of Belgium, spent time in Syria.
– Leader of the attacks. He directed three attackers to Bataclan by phone A few blocks away, according to French terrorism analyst Jean-Charles Brissard.
– Joined Isis in 2014. He has been implicated in the planning of several terror attacks and conspiracies in Western Europe, most notably the one that broke out in Belgium in January 2015.
– A French counter-terrorism source told CNN that French airstrikes were carried out against an ISIS training camp in Raqqa in October 2015 in an attempt to kill Aboud.

Ibrahim Abdeslam:
– Deceased. Le Monde reported that Abdeslam was the suicide bomber who detonated near a cafe on Boulevard Voltaire. The Paris prosecutor’s office identified the attacker as a 31-year-old French national, but did not release his name.
– French citizen living in Belgium.
– Salah Abdeslam’s brother.
– “Ibrahim tried to go to Syria and was deported by the Turks in early 2015,” Belgian prosecutor Eric Van der Sept told CNN. “After that we interrogated him.” Investigators released Ibrahim and his brother Salah Abdeslam in February after they denied they wanted to go to Syria.

Salah Abdeslam:
– Under arrest. holding Following an encounter with the authorities in Belgium on 18 March 2016.
– Born in Belgium, French citizen.
Ibrahim Abdeslam’s brother.
Abdeslam was previously questioned by French police, but was not taken into custody, said a source close to the Paris attacks investigation. He was driving towards the Belgian border when police stopped him and questioned him hours after the attacks.
– Investigators believe he may be the driver of a black Renault Clio that shot down three suicide bombers near the Stade de France on the night of 13 November.
– From April 2018 up to 20 years in prison for shooting with Belgian police before being arrested.

Mohamed Abrini:
– Under arrest. Arrested during a police raid in Brussels on 8 April 2016.
– According to police, Aberini drove a car that had been abandoned in a Paris neighborhood where the November 13 shootings took place. He had shot down one of the raiders attacking the Stade de France.
Officials said Aberini was also suspected of having a role in the March 22 attack on Brussels airport. He was seen walking with two suicide bombers in surveillance footage at the airport.

Ahmed Al Mohamed (not his real name):
– Deceased. One of three bombers that detonated themselves at the Stade de France.
– held an emergency passport or similar document and declared himself a Syrian named Ahmed al-Muhammad, born on September 10, 1990.
– According to a French senator briefed by the Interior Ministry, several Syrian refugees arrived on the Greek island of Leros on 3 October. They were allowed to enter Greece and from there to Macedonia, then to Serbia and Croatia, where they registered at the Opatovac refugee camp. Eventually, he made his way to Paris.

Sammy Amimore:
– Deceased. Identified as one of the suicide bombers who carried out the massacre in Bataklan.
– Amimore was known to have links to terrorists and was the subject of an international arrest warrant since 2013, after violating the judicial supervision under which he was held.

Bilal Hadfi:
– Deceased. One of three suicide bombers killed outside the Stade de France.
– Resident of Belgium.

Fouad Mohamed-Agad:
– Deceased. One of three suicide bombers armed with assault rifles in Bataklan.
French citizens.
– Identification from the DNA of family members.

Ismail Umar Mustafai:
– Deceased. Identified as one of three suicide bombers armed with assault rifles in Bataclan.
French citizens.
Mostafai is believed to have been radicalized in 2010, but has never been charged with terrorism.
Mostefai entered Turkey legally in 2013. The following year, France provided four suspected terrorist names, and subsequent investigations revealed Mostefai was linked to that group. In December 2014 and June 2015, Turkey requested more information about Mostefai, but France did not respond. There is no record of Mustafai leaving Turkey.

Identity unknown:
– Deceased. One of three bombers that detonated themselves at the Stade de France.

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