Skip to content
Support Us

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Jacques Brinon

As it happened: At least 120 people dead as Paris is hit by explosions and shootings

A state of emergency has been declared in France, and its borders have been closed.

FRANCE 24 / YouTube

[Note: Authorities were reporting the death toll as 'at least 120' early on Saturday morning. The headline on this Liveblog was changed at 6.30am to reflect the latest figures. The rest of the information here has been left as it was in its last previous update. For the latest on the unfolding situation in France, click here]

PARIS HAS BEEN hit by a series of explosions and shooting incidents throughout the city tonight.

Police at least 118 people were killed during a hostage-taking at the Bataclan theatre, with at least 40 more dead in several separate attacks.

What we know so far:

  • Reports that at least 118 people have been killed in a siege at the Bataclan theatre.
  • Three explosions, including two suicide bombings, outside the Stade de France during France-Germany football match. President Francois Hollande evacuated.
  • Separate shootings at further locations in Paris.

The Department of Foreign Affairs has set up a phone line at 01-408-2000 for anyone worried about relatives or friends who not yet accounted for in Paris.

Any Irish in Paris can also contact the Embassy on +33144176700.

AFP quotes police sources as saying at least 18 people have been killed.

Paris police now say at least 26 people have been confirmed dead, and that a hostage-taking is under way at the Bataclan theatre on Boulevard Voltaire.

A witness at the scene of the hostage-taking at the Bataclan theatre says “There was blood everywhere,” adds that the attacker used a pump-action shotgun.

Le Parisien now reports that at least 30 people have been confirmed dead.

The Associated Press reports that 100 people have been taken hostage at the Bataclan theatre, and that the death toll has risen to 35.

Spectators at tonight’s France-Germany football match are reportedly taking refuge inside the Stade de France.

AP are reporting that 35 people have been confirmed dead, with 100 hostages taken at the Bataclan theatre on Boulevard Voltaire in Paris

bataclan Google Maps Google Maps

This video appears to indicate that one of the explosions at the Stade de France was audible inside the stadium.

The deputy mayor of Paris says it’s too early to conclude that the attacks are coordinated acts of terror – but says that it “looks that way”.

For those who may have loved ones in Paris at present, this is the number to call for the French embassy there

President Michael D Higgins and Taoiseach Enda Kenny have both expressed their shock and offered their condolences after tonight’s attacks.

arasstatement

taoiseachstatement

President Obama to deliver a statement regarding the Paris attacks at 10.45pm Irish time.

There are various reports coming in of another shooting – this time at les Halles, a shopping centre in the centre of the city. These reports are still unconfirmed right now. Understandably, there is a lot of confusion around exactly what is happening in the city at present.

This animated map shows the breadth of the attacks across Paris tonight.

parismap

President Obama has called the attacks tonight an “attack on all humanity”.

Meanwhile, Al Jazeera reports that more emergency services have arrived on the scene at the Bataclan theatre in the last few minutes, where some 100 people are being held hostage.

There are preliminary, unconfirmed reports that a certain number of hostages have escaped from the siege at the Bataclan theatre.

Obama: “We are reminded in this time of tragedy that the bonds of liberté, égalité and fraternité are not only values that the French people care so deeply about but they are values that we share. Those values are going to endure far beyond any act of terrorism or any hateful vision of those that perpetrated the crimes this evening.”

Police officers and rescue workers gather around a victim outside in the 10th arrondissement tonight.

France Paris Shootings Jacques Brinon Jacques Brinon

Spectators invade the pitch of the Stade de France stadium

France Paris Shootings Associated Press Associated Press

Sky News reporting that the hostages in the Bataclan theatre are being held by a young gunman, who may have explosive devices with him

President Francois Hollande addresses the French people, declares a state of emergency and closure of France’s borders:
“I have also called the cabinet which is going to meet soon… This state of emergency will be decreed which means certain places will be closed. Travel may be banned and decisions may be taken about arrests throughout the whole of France”
“The second decision is that borders will be closed”
“My thoughts are with the numerous victims, for the injured, we have to show compassion and solidarity. We also have to show unity”

Hollande:

“France must be strong and great… We also have to call on everyone to be responsible. What the terrorists want is to make us afraid, to seize us with fear. There is something to be afraid of… But we are a nation that can immobilise and once again can overcome the terrorists”

Residents of Paris are offering refuge to anyone stranded in the city tonight, using the #PorteOuverte (Open Door) hashtag:

France Paris Shootings Scenes at the Stade de France as spectators invade the pitch at the end of tonight's match between Germany and France AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

One witness at the scene of the shooting near McDonald’s at around 9.30 pm says they passed the corner of Rue de la Fontaine-au-Roi and Rue du Faubourg du Temple saw four or five motionless bodies, in a “sea of blood.”

lefig Le Figaro Le Figaro

I saw four or five bodies littering the ground, in a sea of blood. The bodies, which were motionless, were on the ground under the terrace of the Le Phare brasserie…

Everyone was dazed and retreated into restaurants.

This video, from BFMTV, gives a sense of the extremely tense atmosphere on the streets of Paris tonight:

BFMTV / YouTube

The three explosions outside the Stade de France earlier tonight have now been confirmed as one bombing and two suicide attacks.

There are preliminary reports of automatic gunfire being heard outside the hostage situation at the Bataclan theatre.

Le Figaro reports that police may have launched an assault on the Bataclan theatre, where up to 100 people are being held hostage.

One witness reports hearing “four very large explosions followed by gunfire.”

Statement from the Islamic Centre of Ireland condemns attack by “sick men with weapons and bombs.”

pasted_image_at_2015_11_13_11_26_pm

Reports on Twitter suggest that taxis in Paris are bringing people to their destinations for free at present.

This video appears to indicate that one of the explosions at the Stade de France was audible inside the stadium.

NeverSayYes / YouTube

One witness, apparently writing from inside the Bataclan hostage-taking described the scene as “carnage”, saying there were “bodies everywhere,” and victims were “cut down one by one.”

I am still at the Bataclan. First floor. Badly hurt. The attack was very quick. There are survivors inside. They slaughtered everyone, one by one…

fbparis1 Benjamin Cazenoves Benjamin Cazenoves

Alive. Just cuts… Carnage… Bodies everywhere.

fbparis2 Benjamin Cazenoves Benjamin Cazenoves

This Facebook post from Eagles of Death Metal saying they’re still trying to find out if all the members of the band and their crew are safe:

eodm

“We are still currently trying to determine the safety and whereabouts of all our band and crew. Our thoughts are with all of the people involved in this tragic situation”

AFP are now reporting that as many as 100 people may have lost their lives in tonight’s attacks in Paris.

Facebook currently has a tool in place for its users to inform their friends that they are alright following tonight’s attacks.

President Francois Hollande is on his way to the scene at the Bataclan theatre where around 100 hostages have apparently lost their lives

Reports from police now suggest that three attackers were killed during the police raid on the Bataclan theatre.

Citing emergency services sources, Le Parisien is now saying that as well as the 100 killed in the Bataclan theatre siege, at least 44 people are confirmed dead, at six different points of attack throughout Paris:

  • Bataclan theatre, Boulevard Voltaire:  At least 100 dead, seven seriously injured, four wounded
  • Stade de France, Saint-Denis: Four dead, 11 seriously injured, 39 wounded
  • Rue Bichat: 14 dead, 10 seriously injured, 10 wounded
  • Avenue de la Republique: Four dead, 11 seriously injured, 10 wounded
  • Charonne: 19 dead, 13 seriously injured, 10 wounded
  • Beaumarchais: Three seriously injured, four wounded

The Minister for Foreign Affairs Charlie Flanagan has just released this statement, in which he has offered his “deepest condolences and sympathy” to the French people.

flan

Click here to view a larger image

Despite the horror of the Bataclan theatre siege, which ended in at least 100 deaths, some of those attending tonight’s concert did manage to escape alive.

The Associated Press has this raw footage of survivors being brought to safety earlier.

Associated Press / YouTube

Aer Lingus have been tweeting to the effect that their schedule in and out of Paris tomorrow remains unchanged at present.

aerling

Some details of what happened in side the Bataclan theatre this evening are starting to emerge.

Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy has called for unity among the French people, and expressed support for Francois Hollande, saying “terrorists have declared war on France.”

In the face of exceptionally serious terrorist attacks, my first thoughts go to the victims of these barbaric acts, their families, their loved ones, and the security forces who are showing exemplary courage.

In these tragic circumstances, the solidarity of all French people is essential. It is in this spirit that I support the decision taken tonight to declare a state of emergency and close the borders.

The terrorists have declared war on France. Our response must demonstrate grit and determination at every moment.

sarkofb Nicolas Sarkozy Nicolas Sarkozy

Speaking at the scene of the Bataclan theatre siege a short time ago, Francois Hollande vowed that the “fight against the attackers will be without mercy.”

US Secretary of State John Kerry, who speaks fluent French, has addressed his condolences to the people of France, in their own language.

I join with the President of the United States in condemning the terrorist attacks in Paris.

This is an attack on humanity and all freedom-loving people.

The Procureur de la Republique (state prosecutor) in Paris has confirmed that five terrorists were killed over the course of the night.

Guardian journalist Jon Swaine has captured this image of the French tricolour being shone from the top of One World Trade Centre in New York – the successor to the Twin Towers.

More evidence that tonight’s horror has effectively placed the city of Paris on lockdown.

All district offices, schools, museums, libraries, gyms, swimming pools, outdoor food markets, will be closed “from tomorrow,” and all planned protests or demonstrations are cancelled. Only marriages will continue to be conducted.

The Associated Press has this raw footage of French security forces storming the Bataclan theatre, and a number of seemingly shocked and dazed hostages emerging to safety.

Associated Press / YouTube

The state prosecutor for Paris, Francois Molins, has warned that accomplices of tonight’s attackers – five of whom were killed – may still be on the loose, AFP reports.

Here’s a selection of Saturday’s front pages, which are understandably dominated by tonight’s horror in Paris.

Le Figaro’s headline is “War right in the middle of Paris.”

Libération has, simply, “Carnage in Paris.”

The national edition of the Le Parisien newspaper has “Terrorist massacre in the middle of Paris.”

La Voix du Nord leads with “Horror in Paris.”

From the Associated Press:

The Paris police prefect said the attackers at the Bataclan theatre blew themselves up with suicide belts as police closed in, killing four people.

He said the gunmen first sprayed cafes outside the venue with machine gunfire, then went inside the concert hall and killed more before the assault by security forces.

The prefect, Michel Cadot, said the one set of attackers was at the stadium and at nearly the same time the second group attacked within the city.

Cadot said all the attackers are believed dead, although authorities are hunting for any possible accomplices.

Witnesses to the Bataclan theatre massacre have been telling Libération exactly what happened.

(Translated).

The killers arrived about half an hour after the concert started, through the main entrance. They cut down everyone who was at the bar.

Then, we saw some movement in the pit. It was like a gust of wind in wheat field. Everyone was falling down – dead, injured and alive.

Even if you never had any experience of war, you understood right away what was going on. We followed a security guard…

…Two of us made it to the roof, and one in a room where he waited for police. We waited on the roof for two hours, around 50 of us.

We felt trapped like rats. There was shooting going on everywhere.

U2 have cancelled their concert in Paris on Saturday night, expressing their “shock and disbelief” at tonight’s attacks, and saying they were “devastated” by the massacre during the concert at the Bataclan.

u2paris U2 U2

Our in-depth coverage will begin again early on Saturday. But for now, here is a selection of images from Paris, on what has been an almost unbelievably horrific and tragic Friday night.

France Paris Shootings Jacques Brinon Jacques Brinon

France Paris Shooting Associated Press Associated Press

France Paris Shooting Associated Press Associated Press

France Paris Shootings Associated Press Associated Press

France Paris Shootings Christophe Ena Christophe Ena

France Paris Shootings Kamil Zihnioglu Kamil Zihnioglu

France Paris Shootings Kamil Zihnioglu Kamil Zihnioglu

Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...
A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.

Close
694 Comments
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute james Roche
    Favourite james Roche
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 7:27 PM

    Makes me realise how lucky we really are despite everything.

    490
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Aidan
    Favourite Aidan
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 8:11 PM

    Oh ye! Being rules by morons is far easier than any of that! At least the morons who govern us just take our money!

    24
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Tommy Hornblower
    Favourite Tommy Hornblower
    Report
    Mar 30th 2013, 12:23 AM

    Ur an awful bollox…

    139
    See 1 more reply ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Aidan
    Favourite Aidan
    Report
    Mar 30th 2013, 12:28 AM

    Why? Being ruled by idiots is heaven compared to any of that. Is it not?

    9
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Shane O' Connor
    Favourite Shane O' Connor
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 7:30 PM

    Jesus, some of these pictures are harrowing and the stories behind them, even worse! It really makes you think about our own, ‘first world’ problems…

    258
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute snooch
    Favourite snooch
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 7:33 PM

    Puts things into context compared to the whining gimp patrol on here moaning that they cant afford skinny lattes and holidays because of the mortgage on their massive house

    189
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Martin Harkin
    Favourite Martin Harkin
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 7:31 PM

    Thatcher was a great friend of Augusto Pinochet during and after his brutal reign. At the same time she was denouncing Nelson Mandela as a terrorist

    179
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Tracy Ni Bhraonain
    Favourite Tracy Ni Bhraonain
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 11:52 PM

    I teach history and when it comes to the holocaust or the famine the kids always ask, how did people let that happen? Whats crazy is that we are still letting it happen!

    73
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute John Michael
    Favourite John Michael
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 11:56 PM

    You only have to look at the treatment of travellers to realise ‘hate’ is alive and well in Ireland.

    29
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Eimear Smith
    Favourite Eimear Smith
    Report
    Mar 30th 2013, 1:14 AM

    Yeah it’s so shocking and depressing to see what people do to each other. Governments dont give a toss unless it’s worth something to them. Thousands being killed in Syria and all they’re doing is political posturing.

    31
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mick Jordan
    Favourite Mick Jordan
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 7:36 PM

    Those pictures of the North Korean kids goes to show the world what a “Socialist Paradise” really looks like.

    67
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Paul Furey
    Favourite Paul Furey
    Report
    Mar 30th 2013, 1:06 AM

    And now the madness of NK has declared war on S Korea. Utter madness. What is going on within their heads?

    As for the morons that say we are having it bad. Move to North Korea please.

    22
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute daniel fell
    Favourite daniel fell
    Report
    Mar 30th 2013, 6:37 AM

    I think your the only person describes it as a socialist paradise

    7
    See 1 more reply ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mick Jordan
    Favourite Mick Jordan
    Report
    Mar 30th 2013, 6:57 AM

    Daniel I was being sarcastic using the usual leftie description of a socialist country.

    11
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Archana Gomes
    Favourite Archana Gomes
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 11:04 PM

    My family affected in 2004 tsunami…still hav nightmares.

    67
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Bridget
    Favourite Bridget
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 8:26 PM

    Nobody should be afraid to give to charity or to fill their Trocaire box….

    There is always someone always worse off than us…

    66
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Tom Maguire
    Favourite Tom Maguire
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 10:14 PM

    Not a cent would I give to Trocaire… I dont really care about the third world

    16
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Dom Morgan
    Favourite Dom Morgan
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 8:59 PM

    Thousands of people were killed or ‘disappeared’ during the regime led by General Augusto Pinochet until 1988….

    Two point nine thousand to be precise in 8 years. An hours work for Chairman Mao or Comrade Tito, both still very much beloved………

    39
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Dom Morgan
    Favourite Dom Morgan
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 9:12 PM

    Seriously, it’s an insult to include Pinochet and not include the Balkans war. Pinochet’s only sin was to align his economic policy with the liberal Chicago school and produce a relative success of a country (in contrast to an array of Latin American lefties who screwed up their countries). On the other hand, the massacre in Srebrenica for example (for which the armed ‘forces’ of an EU country take the blame) resulted in three times more dead in only half a day. Your criteria, dear Journal, is rid of logic.

    28
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute John Michael
    Favourite John Michael
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 11:49 PM

    Chile was the world’s biggest producer of tin but it was being exported to America, especially to the Coca-Cola Co., for extremely low prices. When Allende came to power he wanted to nationalise the industry. This would have cost Coca-Cola millions as the tin for their cans and bottle tops all came from Chile. They put pressure on Henry Kissinger to do something about this. He in turn tasked the CIA to overthrow the government and replace it with one favourable to America’s needs. That’s where Pinochet came in. Thousands were murdered just so he could line his pockets, and America, a country that prides itself for its democracy, destroyed this fledgling democracy for purely monetary reasons. Pinochet didn’t create the Chilean economy. In fact, he set it back years.

    44
    See 2 more replies ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Dom Morgan
    Favourite Dom Morgan
    Report
    Mar 30th 2013, 6:46 AM

    Ah yes, the nationalization of various industries would have been another Latin American socialist success just like that of Argentina where Peron’s (national)socialists policies brought the country to a permanent state of disrepair. Argentina is a unique case in the economic history insofar that it was the only country in the World that managed to drop off the top-20 richest countries list (it was replaced by Japan) in the past 100 years. Even the BBC had this to say about Chile:

    “The economy of Chile is ranked as an upper-middle income economy by the World Bank,[9] and is one of South America’s most stable and prosperous nations”

    If it was down to Allende’s chest-thumping, this would have ended in IMF bail-outs and plundering of pension funds just like it did in Argentina (presumably also the fault of those goddamn Americans).

    5
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Dom Morgan
    Favourite Dom Morgan
    Report
    Mar 30th 2013, 6:50 AM

    Bleeding-heart students don’t mind wearing badges with romantic images of that serial murderer CheGuevara for the same reason. So much about principles. Leftists generally like guys in uniforms who murder opposition and rule by decree but only if they align with socialist policies. Pinochet could have had his restaurants in Dublin like Mao only if he had read Marx a bit more and did not use leftist methods to deal with leftist thugs.

    5
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Pamela
    Favourite Pamela
    Report
    Mar 29th 2013, 8:24 PM

    The story of Allende and Chile is what cemented me as a socialist. The likely election of a left govt in Greece, Syriza next time around could see a IMF/EU technocratic coup to ensure the austerity agenda is not interrupted in Europe. It’s very scary considering the openly fascist right wing that already has support in Greece.

    15
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Colin C
    Favourite Colin C
    Report
    Mar 30th 2013, 2:42 PM

    You could have looked closer to home at Russia and Eastern Europe for how this whole socialism thing works out.

    4
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Pamela
    Favourite Pamela
    Report
    Mar 30th 2013, 2:50 PM

    Look even closer to home, maybe the q for food parcels at the cappuchin friary to see how capitalism has worked out….

    2
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds