Paris- The office of a satirical
magazine in Paris turned into a horror show when two gunmen burst in and began
firing, killing at least 12 before apparently fleeing on foot.
French President Francois Hollande called the
bloodshed at the office of Charlie Hebdo "a terrorist attack."
"(The gunmen) will be chased as long as
necessary, so that they can be stopped and be brought before judges," he
said.
• Hollande said that "we have to ...
show we are a united country, we know how to react appropriately, with
firmness, but always with concern for national unity."
"We knew that we were threatened like
other countries in the world," the President said. "We are threatened
because we are a country of freedom."
• European Commission Vice President Frans
Timmermans called Wednesday's incident "an attack on all of us, on our
fundamental values, on the freedoms our #EU societies are built upon."
• A U.S. official says France has been a very
"willing partner" in tracking down Islamist extremists fighting in
Syria and Iraq.
Washington expects that "if they can't
find these guys right away, then they will quickly be sharing any profile
information or details with us," a second U.S. official said.
• U.S. President Barack Obama has been
briefed with limited details about the Paris attack, White House spokesman Josh
Earnest told CNN on Wednesday morning. Earnest said he is not aware of any
imminent threat to the United States.
• Four people wounded in the attack are in
critical condition, Hollande said.
• Journalists and policemen are among the
victims in the attack, said Hollande, who added that at least four were
seriously wounded. He said it would be a few hours before a definite number of
injured is known.
• British Prime Minister David
Cameron reacted to the deadly shooting, saying on Twitter: "The murders in
Paris are sickening. We stand with the French people in the fight against
terror and defending the freedom of the press."
These developments come after two
heavily armed men entered the Charlie Hebdo office in Paris' 11th district,
close to Place de la Bastille, and opened fire, SPG police union spokesman Luc
Poignant told CNN affiliate BFMTV.
A witness who works in the office opposite
the magazine's told BFMTV that he saw two hooded men, dressed in black, enter
the building with Kalashnikov submachine guns.
"We then heard them open fire inside,
with many shots," he told the channel. "We were all evacuated to the
roof. After several minutes, the men fled, after having continued firing in the
middle of the street."
Witnesses also spoke of seeing a rocket
launcher, according to French media reports.
A video taken by a journalist for the
Premieres Lignes agency shows the gunmen shouting "God is great!" as
they began the attack, Le Monde reported. They also cried "We have avenged
the Prophet!"
Four of the newspaper's best-known
cartoonists were killed in the attack, according to a law enforcement source
quoted in Le Monde newspaper: Charb, Cabu, Wolinski and Tignous. Charb was also
the director of Charlie Hebdo.
Two police officers were also among the dead,
the law enforcement source said, according to Le Monde.
There was no immediate claim of
responsibility.
The French government raised the
country's security alert system to its highest level Wednesday after the
attack, according to French media.
Satirical magazine has drawn
anger
The satirical magazine is no stranger to
controversy for having lampooned a variety of subjects, including Christianity.
But what it's done on Islam has gotten the most attention and garnered the most
vitriol.
Its last tweet before Wednesday's attack
featured a cartoon of ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and the words,
"And, above all, health."
Earlier cartoons depicting the Prophet
Mohammed -- depictions that are deplored by Muslims -- spurred protests and the
burning of the magazine's office three years ago.
No comments:
Post a Comment