TIMELINE: A night of terror in Paris | Inquirer News

TIMELINE: A night of terror in Paris

/ 12:27 AM November 16, 2015

France Paris Shootings

People rest on a bench after being evacuated from the Bataclan theater after a shooting in Paris, Saturday, Nov. 14, 2015. A series of attacks targeting young concert-goers, soccer fans and Parisians enjoying a Friday night out at popular nightspots killed over 100 people in the deadliest violence to strike France since World War II. AP

PARIS—The attackers worked in three synchronized teams, wearing matching suicide vests and carrying the same weapons. In an excruciating half-hour on Friday night, they unleashed their terror. One suicide bombing after another at the national stadium, sprays of gunfire in the crowded restaurants and streets of central Paris, and finally a hostage standoff that drenched a 19th century dance hall with the blood of dozens of young people out for a night of rock music.

Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said three suicide attackers died near the stadium, three in the concert hall, and one further south on the same boulevard.

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Here is how it happened, based on accounts from French authorities and witnesses.

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9 p.m.–Kickoff of the France-Germany soccer match at the French national stadium and the beginning of the rock show at the Bataclan concert hall. Both packed with fans, the match includes French President Francois Hollande among spectators. In the audience at the Eagles of Death Metal show is the sister of French striker Antoine Griezmann, who started in Friday night’s game.

9:20 p.m.–A man with a Syrian passport and an explosives vest blows himself up at Gate D of the stadium, killing himself and a bystander. The match continues.

9:25 p.m.–Gunmen in a black rented Seat Leon open fire on a bar and a restaurant—Le Carillon and Petit Cambodge—killing 15 people and leaving more than 100 casings for bullets of different calibers, including 7.62 mm (the

ammunition for the Russian-made

AK-47 assault rifle), strewn at the scene.

When the shooting starts, Emilio Macchia, an Italian book designer visiting for a publishing fair, starts to run from the Carillon.

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“A girl opened the door to her building and let us in,” Macchia says. “We hid inside with 10 or 15 other people. I still remember one girl, she said she’d seen one huge man shooting. That’s when I realized it was a terror attack.”

9:30 p.m.–A second suicide bomber approaches Gate H of the stadium, blowing himself up but claiming no other victims.

9:32 p.m.–Gunmen in a rented Seat Leon open fire on a La Bonne Biere bar on Rue de la Fontaine au Roi, just around the corner from the restaurant shootings. Five people are killed. About a hundred casings for bullets of different calibers, including 7.62 mm, are left on the ground.

9:36 p.m.–President Hollande presses the cell phone to his ear inside the glass-lined booth overlooking the soccer field, absorbing the horror tearing into the French capital for the second time this year. The digital clock above him ticks away the seconds in red: 21:36:49

Just then, gunmen in a black Seat attack Rue de Charonne, killing 19 people. Sebastien Jagreau, a witness who arrives shortly afterward, says the bodies of dead and wounded were sprawled on tables and the ground.

“We saw a lady on the first table I thought she had bump and then we realized it was a bullet in her head and not a bump,” Jagreau says. “She was stretched on the table with her beer next to her. Then I see a guy crying because his wife was dead then we go on and we realize we are in the middle of a pond of blood.”

Again, about 100 casings for bullets of different calibers, including 7.62 mm, are left on the ground.

9:40 p.m.–A black Volkswagen Polo parks outside the Bataclan concert hall on Boulevard Voltaire, and three people emerge, opening fire as they enter the packed venue.

The US band Eagles of Death Metal is several songs into the show and playing to a full house. The attackers enter, apparently unnoticed over the loud music, armed with automatic weapons, their bodies wired with explosives.

Among the hostage-takers is a Frenchman, one week shy of his 30th birthday, convicted eight times between 2004 and 2010 for minor crimes, and flagged for ties to Islamic radicals.

In brief communication with security forces, the hostage-takers invoke Syria and Iraq. As shots ring out, people escape from side doors of the venue, some dragging bodies with them. One woman clings to a second-story window. Among those to escape is Griezmann’s sister.

At that moment, a suicide bomber detonates his vest further down Boulevard Voltaire. The bomber is the only victim.

9:53 p.m.–A suicide attacker about 400 meters from the stadium detonates his vest, identical to those of the others with triacetone triperoxide (TATP) explosives. No one else is killed.

12:20 a.m.–Security forces storm the Bataclan. Two of the attackers detonate their suicide vests; a third is shot by law enforcement and the vest explodes. Eighty-nine people are killed, and many remain critically injured.

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Philippe Juvin, an emergency room doctor at the Georges Pompidou hospital, says he has never had to care for so many victims at once. “The majority were gunshot wounds inflicted with weapons of war, of high caliber, in the thorax, the abdomen, their legs and arms. Also, the psychological trauma, the people that witness these kinds of events are deeply affected, even if some may not be physically injured, it hurts their soul, that is why we had a psychiatrist with us.” AP

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