The bells of Notre Dame rang out Thursday as Paris marked 10 years since France’s worst-ever peacetime attack, honouring the 130 people killed in a night of shootings and suicide bombings that scarred the country.
Flowers, candles and photos surrounded commemorative plaques bearing the names of those killed — and of two people who later took their own lives — at the sites struck by jihadists on the night of November 13, 2015.
Outside the cafes, restaurants and concert hall in Paris where most of them lost their lives, officials, survivors and relatives laid wreaths after moments of silence.
“The pain remains,” President Emmanuel Macron, who led senior French officials in the commemorative ceremonies, wrote on X.
“In solidarity, for the lives lost, the wounded, the families and loved on

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