00:00Ten years ago, Islamic State gunmen and suicide bombers rampaged through cafes,
00:08restaurants and the Baraklan concert hall in Paris, leaving 130 people dead and hundreds injured.
00:16They struck within minutes of one another. Suicide bombers detonated outside the Stade de France,
00:22gunmen fired on café terraces, and three attackers stormed the Baraklan at 9.47 p.m.,
00:28killing 90 people before police ended the siege. Two survivors who later died by suicide have since been recognized among the victims.
00:39The attacks were the deadliest in France since World War II, prompting the hardening of security
00:45while deepening a civic reflex for solidarity that endures a decade on.
00:50As France prepares to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the attacks that reshaped the country's sense of safety and purpose,
00:57the date reopens wounds for many survivors.
01:01Paris is marking the anniversary with a sequence of tributes led by President Emmanuel Macron
01:07and Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo at each attack site.
01:10The commemorations will culminate with the opening of a memorial garden opposite City Hall
01:15that includes plantings that echo the attack sites and benches for reflection.
01:22It will have been inauguration followed by building one another.
01:24It's like a policeman. It's an iceberg, I'm guessing, that one has been waiting for it.
01:25It's a bit impressive for the time to attack the north, but it has been its own,
01:27because it's a treasure-tipish.
01:28It's a treasure-tipish.
01:29It's an important thing that the-pует is to meet the animal garden and the body of a soldier.
01:30It's a great knee-tip.
01:31It's the mainitory-pulls part of the disease is to perform every single one of the victims.
01:32It's a very important thing that the physicalrees of the sea might never be built in the continent.
01:33And the world has taken such a long time.
01:34And the powers of the human being used to Collecting Larryòn
Comments