Officials say all necessary measures are being taken to protect France and its citizens
Some 500 extra troops are being deployed around Paris after three days of terror in the French capital killed 17 people. Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said all necessary measures were being taken to protect the country. Police in France are hunting for any accomplices of three gunmen killed by police on Friday after two sieges. Tens of thousands of people have taken part in silent marches to remember the victims in Nice, Pau and Orleans. President Francois Hollande has warned the danger was not over yet.
"We have to be vigilant. I also ask you to be united - it's
our best weapon," said Mr Hollande in a televised address on Friday
night.
After a security cabinet meeting on Saturday, Interior Minister
Bernard Cazeneuve said France would remain on its highest state of
alert "for the next few weeks".
He promised tight security for a massive unity march in Paris on Sunday.
Those set to attend Sunday's unity rally include UK Prime
Minister David Cameron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Turkish Prime
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
"Sunday, the French people will cry out their love of liberty," said Prime Minister Manuel Valls.
France would be "firm and relentless in the face of the
enemies of liberty", he added, urging all people to "assume their
responsibilities".
Hostages' bodies
The violence started on Wednesday when two brothers killed 12
people and injured 11 in an attack on the offices of satirical magazine
Charlie Hebdo.
On Friday, Cherif and Said Kouachi were killed by police in
Dammartin-en-Goele, 35km (22 miles) north of Paris, as they emerged from
a besieged warehouse building firing at police.
One hostage had earlier been released and a second employee, who was hiding in the building's cafeteria, was freed by police.
Police shortly afterwards launched an assault on the
supermarket in Paris, killing Amedy Coulibaly and rescuing 15 hostages.
They found the bodies of four hostages who are believed to have been
killed before the assault. These victims have not yet been identified.
Police are searching for Hayat Boumeddiene, who was said to
be with Coulibaly when a policewoman was killed in Paris on Thursday,
and is described as "armed and dangerous".
France's chief prosecutor, Francois Molins, said the
investigation would "focus on determining who their accomplices were,
how these criminal actions were financed, and all the instruction and
help they may have benefited from whether in France or from overseas".
He said 16 people had been detained for questioning, including the wife of one of the Kouachi brothers.
Police are still searching for Hayat Boumeddiene, left, said to be gunman Amedy Coulibaly's partner |
Prosecutors said the two brothers in Dammartin had a rocket launcher
primed and ready to fire, while the supermarket in Paris had been
booby-trapped with explosives.
Security officials have said they were aware of Coulibaly and
the two brothers. Said Kouachi was known to have travelled to Yemen in
2011.
Both brothers are understood to have been on UK and US watch-lists.
While holed up in the warehouse north of Paris, Cherif Kouachi phoned
a French TV news network and told them he was acting on behalf of the
Yemen branch of al-Qaeda (AQAP), having been financed by its leader
Anwar al-Awlaki before he was killed by a US drone strike in Yemen in
2011.
The extremist group released an audio message late on Friday praising the attacks but stopped short of claiming responsibility.
Earlier on Friday, a man claiming to be Coulibaly told French
TV station BFMTV that he was a member of the Islamic State militant
group, and that he had "co-ordinated" his attack with the Kouachi
brothers.
Mr Molins confirmed that Coulibaly knew one of the brothers
and their respective partners had spoken on the phone more than 500
times.
No details have been released of those people killed in the Hyper Cacher, but testimonies of those caught up in the sieges have helped paint a picture of how events unfolded.
Take from: bbc.com
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