Then, attackers began indiscriminately shooting people at a cafes, bars and restaurants near the Canal Saint-Martin in the 10th arrondissement, in Rue de la Fontaine-au-Roi and Rue de Charonne. A suicide bomber blew himself up in Boulevard Voltaire.
In the worst incident, attackers began shooting inside the Bataclan theater, where the group Eagles of Death Metal were playing to an audience of around 1,500.
— EaglesOfDeathMetal (@EODMofficial) November 18, 2015
In the ensuing chaos, the French Parliament has heard allegations that the authorities were slow to react — despite being on high terror alert warning, following the Charlie Hebdo and related attacks in January 2015, and subsequent terror threats.
Families of victims had to wait days to find out what had happened to their loved ones, with many complaining that it was difficult to get information from official sources, despite social media exploding with rumors.
Georges Salines, who heads the "November 13, Brotherhood and Truth" association said the authorities' delay in informing next of kin "was well beyond what one would reasonably call botched," adding that the authorities were "atrociously badly prepared."
Another witness, Caroline Langlade, who was among 40 people hiding in a tiny side room at the Bataclan said she had tried in vain to call the police on the normal emergency number and resorted to calling her mother in Nancy, a city in northeast France, who called her local police. A second time Mme Langdale called the emergency services, the operator "hung up on me because I was whispering."
Intelligence Failures
The complaints against the authorities come amid criticism of intelligence failures ahead of the attacks, which could have been averted. It emerged after the attacks that Abdelhamid Abaaoud — one of the terrorists — was able to cross from Europe by ferry and meet jihadists in the UK, despite having an international arrest warrant out on him.
France extends state of emergency for 3 months – reports https://t.co/tTsO74Gfen #ParisAttacks pic.twitter.com/EOu3d3jwda
— Sputnik (@SputnikInt) February 17, 2016
Salah Abdeslam, from Belgium, was known to the law enforcement services yet managed to buy detonators in France using his driving license as proof of identity.
France extends state of emergency law. Here's why that's a bad idea https://t.co/Ih9Cx7cOfk #ParisAttacks pic.twitter.com/Etc69n6HE5
— Human Rights Watch (@hrw) February 16, 2016
It has also emerged that French intelligence agents had interviewed a jihadist who had returned from Syria in June 2015, and who said he had met Abaaoud.
The jihadist told the officers that Abaaoud discussed soft targets in Paris that would involve mass killings. He spoke of "finding an easy target, a concert for example, where there are [a lot of] people. Imagine a rock concert in a European country, if we gave you arms, would you be prepared to fire into the crowd?" he said.