Two Paris attack suspects killed, 7 arrested in police raid
Meanwhile, Belgian authorities conducted six raids in the Brussels region linked to Paris attackers Bilal Hadfi and Salah Abdeslam.
French police said more than a dozen people have been arrested there since the attacks.
Among the suspects still on the run is Abdelhamid Abaaoud, 27, the alleged mastermind of the attacks.
It also said a large number of ISIS militants and their families had been forced to flee Raqqa become of the attacks and have headed to Iraq. Abaaoud, a Belgian citizen, is believed to have joined the terrorist Islamic State group in 2013, according to the BBC.
“You know, during the course of a vehicle journey, you can talk about everything and nothing, listen to music, even smoke a joint, but at no time, No, they didn’t talk about that”, he said.
French investigators have identified five of seven attackers who were killed or blew themselves up in the attack, and have launched a manhunt for an eighth man, 26-year-old Salah Abdeslam, whose brother was one of the suicide bombers.
Belgian police are also reportedly searching for a man named Mohamed K, from Roubaix, northern France, who is suspected of supplying the terrorist gang with explosives.
Before seeing Hollande, Kerry met with diplomats from the US Embassy in Paris to thank them for their service. “All my life, I have seen the blood of Muslims flow”, Abaaoud said in a video made public in 2014.
The body representing Muslims in France said it would ask all 2,500 mosques in the country to condemn “all forms of violence or terrorism” in prayers this Friday.
Assad is backed by Russian Federation and Iran, but the United States and France have demanded he step down. It invoked an article of the EU’s Lisbon Treaty that has never been used, which states nations must provide assistance when one of its members falls victim to “armed aggression”.
Mr Fauvergue said sniper fire then hit a male terrorist who was firing at police but “despite this, the shots [from the terrorist] continued”. The plot was foiled and police raided residences in Verviers, killing two of the supposed jihadi and 13 others.
In grieving France, police racked up arrests and seized weapons as they searched for clues after the wave of coordinated attacks by gunmen and suicide bombers on a stadium, bars and restaurants, and a concert venue that have shaken the country to its core. The Syria-based group later claimed responsibility.