Nation/World

An Awful Realization for Paris as Terror Strikes City Again

PARIS — The night was chilly but thick with excitement as the big match between France's national soccer team and archrival Germany was underway at the national stadium in a northern suburb of Paris. President François Hollande watched with the crowd as the French players pushed the ball across midfield.

Then came the sharp, unmistakable crack, overwhelming the roar of the crowd. A stunned moment passed. Players and spectators seemed confused and eventually the awful realization swept through the stadium: Terror, for the second time this year, had returned to Paris.

The symmetry could not be more jarring. A Parisian year that began with the bloodshed and chaos of the terror attacks at the satirical magazine, Charlie Hebdo, and later at a Jewish grocery, now had an even deadlier coda: With events still fluid and exact details unclear, the authorities said more than 100 people had been killed in a series of attacks across Paris. But estimates on the total number of dead varied widely in the confusion.

The urgent, bleating screech of sirens filled the evening air as police cruisers raced through the streets, uncertain if more mayhem was to come. Taxis ferried people home for free as the police advised residents to stay inside. Ambulances screamed down the boulevards, as a stunned and confused French capital was again left to wonder: Why us? Once again?

"Paris has been hit again by terror tonight," Deputy Mayor Patrick Klugman said on Twitter.

For three days in January, Paris was gripped with fear, as the police searched for Chérif and Said Kouachi, after the two brothers attacked the Charlie Hebdo offices, a manhunt that ended with the Kouachis dying in a shootout. The terror only deepened when a third terrorist, Amedy Coulibaly, attacked a Jewish grocery, killing customers, before the police stormed the building and killed him.

Those attacks left France reeling for months, dredging up sadness and fury and horror. They also stirred a national debate over freedom of expression and the state of French Islam, a topic that has divided France like few others and seems certain to intensify now.

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The French authorities, sharply criticized for failing to monitor the homegrown jihadists who had been known to security officials, vowed to tighten scrutiny of suspected terror cells and protect the country. But again, there has been a series of attacks, coordinated and sprawling, with Paris shocked out of its Friday night reverie.

The city was engulfed in chaos. At the Stade de France, spectators described a sense of panic as the explosions shook the stadium and quickly undermined whatever confidence had returned in the months since the attack on the magazine.

"Of course I'm afraid for the future," said Tony Vandelle, 31, who attended the France-Germany match with his brother. "With all the strikes in Syria, we're not safe anymore."

"Already France was traumatized when Charlie Hedbo happened, including our children, who still talk about it at school," he added. "This is taking things to another level. To see something like this again so soon is frightening for the future."

Karim Laruelle and his brother, Smaen, described hearing three explosions.

"It sounded like firecrackers," Karim Laruelle said "We did not really know what was happening until we started getting texts from our families telling us the shootings had happened elsewhere in Paris.

"The wanted to know if we were safe."

It was a question that resonated in every corner of the city. At the junction of Folie-Méricourt and Oberkampf, roughly 150 yards from The Bataclan theater, where a rock concert had become a hostage scene, the sound of shooting echoed from the direction of the theater: single shots followed by automatic fire and a serious of loud bands.

Besides the assaults at The Bataclan and the stadium, the attackers chose five of Paris' busiest night life streets and intersections, including the Boulevard Voltaire, the Boulevard Beaumarchais and the Rue de Charonne.

A man calling himself Leo, who lives near the Rue de Charonne, told Europe 1, a radio station, that his wife was among the first to help victims near the Petit Cambodge restaurant — describing the scene as a "massacre" and "apocalyptic."

His wife told him that bodies were "littered on the ground."

At The Bataclan, a witness named Julien told Europe One that two men entered the theater with guns blazing.

"It was a scene of carnage," he said. "The men shot at the audience, which lasted for about 10 minutes, with one shot lasting three or four seconds. They shot, recharged their guns, and shot again, even aiming at those already lying on the ground. I saw about 10 bodies lying on the ground, but couldn't tell whether they were injured or dead."

The day had begun with ominous warnings: bomb threats at the German soccer team's hotel and at Gare du Lyon, one of the city's train stations. Trains coming into the station were halted or rerouted as officers combed the building for explosives. The hotel was also searched. Time passed.

Then the police reopened the station. It was a bomb scare. They happen fairly often in Paris. The city resumed its normal rhythms, unaware of what was coming hours later.

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