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    Home»World News»France remembers Bataclan attacks but knows enemy has not gone away
    World News

    France remembers Bataclan attacks but knows enemy has not gone away

    Olive MetugeBy Olive MetugeNovember 14, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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    France remembers Bataclan attacks but knows enemy has not gone away
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    Paris attacks: What happened 10 years ago?

    Just as France marks the 10th anniversary of the Bataclan massacres, another reminder has come of the permanence of the jihadist threat.

    A former girlfriend of the only jihadist to survive the November 2015 attacks has been arrested on suspicion of plotting her own violent act.

    The woman – a 27 year-old French convert to Islam named as Maëva B – began a letter-writing relationship with Salah Abdeslam, 36, who is serving a life sentence in jail near the Belgian border following his conviction in 2022.

    When prison guards discovered that Abdeslam had been using a USB key containing jihadist propaganda, they traced its origin to face-to-face meetings that the prisoner had with Maëva B.

    Detectives then looked into Maëva B’s own computer and telephone, where they found evidence she may have been planning a jihadist attack, and on Monday she was placed under judicial investigation along with two alleged associates.

    With France commemorating 10 years since the worst attack in its modern history, the arrest has focused minds on the enemy that never went away.

    Six plots have been thwarted this year, says Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez, and the threat level remains high.

    “Unfortunately, no one can guarantee the end of attacks,” President Emmanuel Macron said at the inauguration of the Jardin du 13 Novembre 2015 memorial garden.

    “But we can guarantee that for those who take up arms against France, the response will be uncompromising.”

    Reuters People hold hands to form a human solidarity chain near the site of the attack at the Bataclan concert hall in Paris, November 15, 201Reuters

    The word Bataclan has become a byword in France for extreme Islamist violence since the Paris attacks in 2015

    On the evening of 13 November 2015, jihadist gunmen and suicide bombers conducted a sequence of co-ordinated attacks that culminated in a bloody raid on the Bataclan concert hall in eastern Paris.

    Before that, three suicide bombers blew themselves up outside the Stade de France where a football international was under way. Then others in the gang opened fire with Kalashnikovs on people drinking in bars and cafés not far from the Bataclan.

    There, a performance by American group The Eagles of Death Metal had just started, when three jihadists burst in and fired indiscriminately into the auditorium. They took hostages and then blew themselves up as police moved in.

    Map showing timeline of 13 November 2015 attacks

    Overall 130 people were killed, 90 in the Bataclan, and more than 400 treated in hospital. Countless others suffered psychological trauma.

    The word Bataclan has since become a byword in France for extreme Islamist attacks, in much the same way that 9/11 did in the US.

    Though there have been other attacks since, like the Nice lorry massacre of July 2016 and the beheading of teacher Samuel Paty in October 2020, the scale and organisation of 13 November 2015 set it apart.

    Ten years on, much has changed. The disappearance of the Islamic State (IS) group as a major force in Syria and Iraq means that the wherewithal to conceive, plan and carry out complex terrorist projects is greatly diminished.

    Reuters The Eiffel Tower is lit up with the blue, white and red colours of the French flag to mark the tenth anniversary of the November 13 Paris attacksReuters

    At the end of a day of events on Thursday, the Eiffel Tower will be lit up in the colours of the French flag

    The Bataclan attackers were young men of mainly North African origin, recruited in Belgium and France, trained in IS territory in the Middle East, who then returned to Europe hidden among a vast flow of migrants.

    Everywhere they could draw on a network of supporters offering shelter, transport and cash.

    According to leading Middle East expert Gilles Kepel, intelligence services have also become highly effective in controlling online radicalisation.

    “They now have access to IT resources… which allow them to detect a lot of individual initiatives, often not very sophisticated ones… and stop them before they hatch,” he said in an interview with Le Figaro.

    But according to Mr Kepel, the danger now comes from what he calls “ambient jihadism”.

    “The threat is now home-grown and a lot younger. It feeds on friendships and social networks of the like-minded, without there ever necessarily being people having to give and obey orders,” he said.

    The threat is all the more concerning, he believes, because it is so porous – with events in Gaza and Israel having a “traumatic effect” on the minds of many citizens and being “exploited by the entrepreneurs of anger”.

    France’s current political crisis is also stoking the danger, he argues, with an impotent presidency giving way to a partisan parliament where extremists of left and right hold increasing sway.

    “If what separates us becomes more important than what unites us as French people and fractures the national consensus, then there will open a chasm beneath our feet and violence will have fewer and fewer restraints,” he said.

    MAGALI COHEN/Hans Lucas/AFP A photograph taken on November 11, 2025 shows candles and flowers displayed at a makeshift memorial in tribute of the victims of Paris attacks of November 13, 2015, on the place de la Republique, in ParisMAGALI COHEN/Hans Lucas/AFP

    In recent days survivors have given accounts of how their lives have changed in the past 10 years

    Thursday’s commemorations will be held throughout the day at the various attack sites, culminating with the opening of the new 13 November garden in central Paris.

    When night falls, the Eiffel Tower will be bathed in the red, white and blue of the French flag.

    French media have been full of accounts and memories, with survivors describing how their lives have changed.

    In an unexpected development, Salah Abdeslam has let it be known through his lawyer that he would be prepared to co-operate in any effort at “restorative justice” – a procedure where victims and perpetrators meet to discuss the impact of a crime.

    The idea has been mooted by some families – but others are vehemently opposed.

    According to Laurent Sourisseau, a cartoonist also known as Riss, who was shot and wounded in the Charlie Hebdo attack a few months before the Bataclan massacres, Abdeslam’s offer is “perverse”.

    “Restorative justice exists for other types of crime – common crimes,” he said.

    “But terrorism is not a common crime. Salah Abdeslam wants to make us think his crime was like any other. But it was not.”



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