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Paris Siege Survivor's Dramatic TV Interview

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 13 Januari 2015 | 23.12

A graphic designer who hid in a cupboard under a sink while the Kouachi brothers held his boss hostage said his heart "stopped beating" at one point during the ordeal.

Lilian Lepere was working at a print company in Dammartin-en-Goele when Cherif and Said Kouachi laid siege to the building after killing 12 people in Paris.

The 27-year-old broke down in tears while recounting his ordeal to French television station France 2; the first interview he has given since the drama ended.

"One of (the brothers) came and opened a cupboard next to mine," he said. "Inside he found nothing interesting to him. Then he went towards the fridge.

"He asked his accomplice if he wanted to drink something and he responded 'No, and this isn't a time for that'.

"I thought that… if he is looking for something, for food supplies, he will look through all the cupboards.

"So he went towards the fridge and came back towards the place I was hidden in and he drinks (some water) just over my head.

"He was drinking just above me. I could hear water flowing just over my head, because my head is next to the washbasin. I can see his shadow through the opening between doors.

"I moved a little bit. My back was stuck against the pipe which was leaking. I felt water flowing; a surreal moment, completely surreal, and I said to myself 'it's like in a film. We only see that in films'.

"The brain stops thinking, heart stops beating, breath is stopped and you wait, because that is the only thing you can do."

The print firm's boss Michel Catalano told Mr Lepere to hide in the back of the building when he saw the gunmen arriving, allowing him to feed vital information to the police.

Despite hardly being able to move in the confined space, Mr Lepere described the moment he reached for his mobile phone and texted his mother who contacted police.

"It's not big. Imagine something like 70 cm by 90 cm and approximately 50 cm deep. If you move on one side you might open the door and on the other you hit the wall. So you don't move.

"At some point I told myself I should go for it, even if it makes a noise. Phones were ringing here and there in the company, so those noisy moments allowed me to move.

"I was saying that to myself to give me some hope. And after some time, after fifteen minutes, I was able to reach my mobile phone.

"At that point I knew I was in contact with the outside world and it was really good for morale. From that point everything was done between my phone and my mother's phone."

Mr Lepere's mother passed her phone to police who communicated with her son for the duration of the siege.

It was through this series of text messages that police were able to coordinate their plan to begin the assault on the Kouachi brothers.

"(The police) were using only one phone to communicate (with me) and I was able to give them as much information as I could using my ears and feelings," he said.

After eight hours, as night drew in, police launched their attack killing both brothers and ending three days of terror.


23.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Charlie Hebdo To Publish Mohammed Cartoon

Charlie Hebdo will feature a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed in a special "survivor's issue" of the magazine produced after last week's massacre.

The illustrated image will show the bearded figure with a tear in his eye under the message "all is forgiven".

A total of three million copies of the magazine will be printed in several languages - instead of its usual 60,000 - when it goes on sale on Wednesday.

The cover of the magazine has been published online by the Liberation newspaper.

It is the first edition since two Islamist gunmen stormed Charlie Hebdo's headquarters in Paris on 7 January and killed 12 people, in apparent revenge for the publication of cartoons featuring the prophet.

Cherif and Said Kouachi claimed they belonged to the jihadist group al Qaeda in Yemen.

They were killed on Friday, along with accomplice Amedy Coulibaly, who claimed to belong to rival Islamic State group.

Coulibaly murdered a policewoman and then four Jewish shoppers the following day during a hostage drama at a kosher supermarket in the French capital.

Witnesses at the Charlie Hebdo offices reported the attackers shouted "we have avenged the prophet".

The hunt is continuing for Coulibaly's partner, 26-year-old Hayat Boumeddiene, who can be seen in newly released CCTV footage of her arriving at Istanbul Airport on her way to Syria.

It comes after French authorities announced the deployment of thousands of soldiers to boost security in the country in the wake of the attacks.

Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, speaking after an emergency security meeting, said: "We have decided... to mobilise 10,000 men to protect sensitive sites in the whole country.

"This is the first time that our troops have been mobilised to such an extent on our own soil."

Nearly 5,000 police officers have been deployed to protect Jewish schools.

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  1. Gallery: In Pictures: Magazine That Couldn't Be Silenced

    Two editions of Charlie Hebdo pictured in Paris in September 2012. The first pictures a caveman holding fire and oil with the heading "irresponsible newspaper" while the other has an empty front page with the label "responsible newspaper".

People attend a rally in support of the magazine in November 2011, days after the offices were targeted by petrol bombs.

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23.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Retired School Principal Wins $326m Jackpot

By Sky News US Team

A retired school principal has won a $326m (£216m) Mega Millions jackpot, the biggest prize in New York Lottery history.

Harold Diamond, 80, credits his luck to his wife, Carol, a retired high school math teacher, who urged him to stop at the gas station due to bad weather on their drive to dinner.

Mr Diamond noticed the flashing Mega Millions sign and decided to spend $10 for 10 sets of Quick Pick numbers.

"I put the ticket in my wallet and forgot about it," the new millionaire said in a statement released by New York Lottery.

"I went to play golf the next day and the guys in the clubhouse were talking about the jackpot-winning ticket someone bought at a Valero on Route 302, and I thought, wait a minute - I bought a ticket there last night!"

Mr Diamond, of Wurtsboro, New York, a village about 80 miles (129km) northwest of New York City, dashed home, checked his tickets and found he had the winner.

"I was in a dither, a real daze," said Mr Diamond, who retired as school principal in 1995.

Mr Diamond, whose win dates to a drawing on 4 November, waited to cash in his ticket until after 1 January for tax reasons.

He opted to take a single lump sum payment, which comes to about $130m (£86m) after taxes.

Plans for the money include helping family and "giving back to the local community", Mr Diamond said.


23.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mother's Grief As Nations Mourn Attack Victims

Mother's Grief As Nations Mourn Attack Victims

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A tribute is being held for three police officers who died in the Paris terror attacks last week.

French President François Hollande comforted the mother of policewoman Clarissa Jean-Philippe, who was killed during three days of violence in the French capital.

Hollande led the ceremony in the courtyard of the Prefecture de Police, Paris' police headquarters, where he vowed that France would "never yield" to terror in an emotional tribute to the officers.

The president laid the Legion d'honneur medal, the country's highest decoration, on coffins draped in the French flag as the families of the victims looked on.

"Our great and beautiful France will never break, will never yield, never bend" in the face of the Islamist threat that is "still there, inside and outside" the country, said Hollande.

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  1. Gallery: Funerals For Paris Attacks Victims

    Police officers carry the coffins draped in the French flag of the three police officers killed in the recent terror attacks in Paris, at the city's police headquarters

The coffin of French police officer Ahmed Merabet, 40, is carried by colleagues

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The coffins of the three officers killed are placed in the courtyard of the police headquarters

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French President Francois Hollande holds a medal in front of the coffin of late police officer Clarissa Jean-Philippe

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Mr Hollande (L) and Malek Merabet (C), the brother of late police officer Ahmed Merabet, shake hands at the ceremony

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Mother's Grief As Nations Mourn Attack Victims

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

A tribute is being held for three police officers who died in the Paris terror attacks last week.

French President François Hollande comforted the mother of policewoman Clarissa Jean-Philippe, who was killed during three days of violence in the French capital.

Hollande led the ceremony in the courtyard of the Prefecture de Police, Paris' police headquarters, where he vowed that France would "never yield" to terror in an emotional tribute to the officers.

The president laid the Legion d'honneur medal, the country's highest decoration, on coffins draped in the French flag as the families of the victims looked on.

"Our great and beautiful France will never break, will never yield, never bend" in the face of the Islamist threat that is "still there, inside and outside" the country, said Hollande.

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  1. Gallery: Funerals For Paris Attacks Victims

    Police officers carry the coffins draped in the French flag of the three police officers killed in the recent terror attacks in Paris, at the city's police headquarters

The coffin of French police officer Ahmed Merabet, 40, is carried by colleagues

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The coffins of the three officers killed are placed in the courtyard of the police headquarters

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French President Francois Hollande holds a medal in front of the coffin of late police officer Clarissa Jean-Philippe

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Mr Hollande (L) and Malek Merabet (C), the brother of late police officer Ahmed Merabet, shake hands at the ceremony

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23.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Man With 'Links To Paris Gunman' Arrested

A man arrested in Bulgaria was in contact with one of the men who carried out attacks in Paris last week, prosecutors say.

Fritz-Joly Joachin, 29, a French citizen of Haitian origin "was in contact several times with one of the two brothers - Cherif Kouachi," public prosecutor Darina Slavova told AFP news agency.

He was arrested on January 1 while trying to cross into Turkey.

Slavova said the contact happened before Joachin left France on December 30, a week before the Kouachi brothers killed 12 people at the Paris offices of French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo on January 7. 

Joachin was first detained on a European arrest warrant issued by France following claims by his wife that he had kidnapped their three-year-old son.

But as French police looked into the contacts of the Kouachi brothers, Bulgarian prosecutors got a second European arrest warrant issued by a court in Paris.

"The charges are for participation in an organised crime group whose aim was the organisation of terrorist acts," said Slavova.

Security forces in France say they are still hunting members of a group behind the deadly Paris terror attacks.

Up to six terror cell members may still be at large after the Paris attacks in which 17 people were murdered, French police warned.

One of them has been spotted driving a car registered to the partner of one of the dead attackers, according to the authorities.

Police officials said a search was being carried out in the Paris area for the Mini Cooper registered to Hayat Boumeddiene, the girlfriend of Amedy Coulibaly, who gunned down a police officer before killing four people in a Jewish supermarket last Friday.

The attack came after co-conspirators Said and Cherif Kouachi massacred 12 people at the offices of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo on Wednesday.

All three killers were finally cornered and died in police assaults on Friday.

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said Coulibaly "undoubtedly" had an accomplice and "the hunt will go on" for anyone who helped him.

Boumeddiene remains on the run amid reports she has fled to Syria.

More follows...


23.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cops Charged With Murder Of Homeless Man

By Sky News US Team

Prosecutors in New Mexico have filed murder charges against two Albuquerque police officers who shot a mentally ill homeless man during a stand-off last year.

The killing, which was caught on video, sparked protests in Albuquerque over concerns about excessive use of force.

"We have evidence in this case that helps us establish probable cause," District Attorney Kari Brandenburg said after he brought charges against former police detective Keith Sandy and current officer Dominique Perez.

"Our job is to do justice."

The charges come amid a national debate over police use of deadly force, especially in the wake of the deaths of Michael Brown in Missouri and Eric Garner in New York.

Grand juries in those cases decided not to charge the officers involved.

In Albuquerque, Sandy and Perez shot 38-year-old James Boyd after a four-hour stand-off in the Sandia foothills on 16 March.

Mr Boyd, who was accused of illegally camping, was armed with two small knives, local media reported.

Police released the video, taken from a helmet camera, and insisted at the time that the shooting was justified.

They said Mr Boyd had refused to comply and threatened police.

But the shooting triggered protests, sometimes violent. The outrage helped lead to a major federal-ordered overhaul of the Albuquerque Police Department.

Since 2010, Albuquerque police have been involved in more than 40 shootings - 27 of them deadly.


23.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Anti-Islam Protests Dwarfed In Germany

A record anti-Islamic march in Germany has been dwarfed by demonstrators calling for tolerance towards Muslims.

Some 25,000 supporters of the Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the West (PEGIDA) staged the rally in Dresden on Monday.

Waving the German national flag, members held up placards with slogans including "stop multiculturalism - my homeland will stay German".

Wearing black armbands with some carrying "Je suis Charlie" signs, they also held a minute's silence for the 17 victims of the terror attacks in Paris last week.

PEGIDA activists have also announced plans for similar rallies in Switzerland and Austria.

Co-founder Kathrin Oertel told the Reuters news agency: "We are getting more support each week.

"We are against all violence that is religiously motivated whether Muslim or Christian... people have been confronted by it now and are thinking about it more."

But counter demonstrations have sprung up across Germany, with 30,000 people attending an anti-PEGIDA rally in Leipzig, 20,000 in Munich and 8,000 in Dresden.

Similar demonstrations have also taken place in Hanover, Saarbruecken, Duesseldorf, Berlin, Hamburg and Rostock.

Chancellor Angela Merkel had earlier said that "Islam belongs to Germany" and said she would join a Muslim community rally at Berlin's Brandenburg Gate.

She also called on people to stay away from PEGIDA rallies, claiming supporters had "hatred in their hearts".

On Sunday, the offices of a tabloid newspaper in Hamburg were firebombed after it reprinted cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed from French magazine Charlie Hebdo.


23.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

US 'Should Have Sent Higher Official' To Paris

By Sky News US Team

The White House has acknowledged it should have sent a higher-level representative to Sunday's unity march in Paris.

While leaders from Europe, the Middle East and Africa linked arms through the boulevards of Paris, the US was represented by its ambassador to France.

Attorney General Eric Holder was in Paris for security meetings but did not attend the march.

"I think it's fair to say that we should have sent someone with a higher profile", White House press secretary Josh Earnest said.

It was a rare admission of error from the White House, amid a storm of criticism over the lack of a high-profile US official. 

Earlier, John Kerry tried to dismiss the criticism, saying he would travel to Paris this week to show solidarity with the French people.

 "I really think that this is sort of quibbling a little bit."

"Our Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland was there and marched, our ambassador was there and marched, many people from the embassy were there and marched," the secretary of state said.

Mr Kerry said US officials, including himself and President Barack Obama, had been "deeply engaged" with French authorities almost immediately after the first attack occurred and had offered "our intel, our law enforcement and all of our efforts".

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  1. Gallery: Unity March Over France Attacks

    Huge crowds are gathering for the unity march in Paris, in protest at this week's terror attacks. Continue through for more images...

Dozens of world leaders, including David Cameron, are taking part in the march

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23.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Pope Francis Calls For 'Healing And Unity'

Pope Francis has called for "healing and unity" as he arrived in Colombo at the start of a five-day tour of Sri Lanka and the Philippines.

This is his second visit to Asia in six months signifying the importance the Vatican places on the region, even though the Catholic community of Sri Lanka is just 6% of the population.

The Pontiff's visit will highlight a message of reconciliation between the majority Sinhalese Buddhist and the minority Tamil Hindu communities following three decades of civil war.

The Sri Lankan government has refused to co-operate with a UN investigation into alleged war crimes committed during the conflict following a report which claimed 40,000 civilians were killed. Both sides are accused of human-rights violations.

On his arrival at Bandaranaike airport the Pope said: "The process of healing also needs to include the pursuit of truth. Not for the sake of opening old wounds, but rather as a necessary means of promoting justice, healing and unity."

Sri Lanka's religious and ethnic unity has been challenged over recent years as Buddhist fundamentalism and intolerance of minority Muslims in the south has grown.

Sri Lanka's new president Maithripala Sirisena has capitalised on the unpopularity of his predecessor among various ethnic groups and has promised to end repression of religious minorities.

The Pontiff is expected to travel to the north, a region which saw some of the fiercest fighting between rebel Tamil Tigers and the Sri Lankan army.

He will also visit the Our Lady of Madhu shrine, revered by both Sinhalese and Hindus.

From Sri Lanka the Pope will travel to the Philippines, Asia's largest catholic country, where he will deliver a service in the capital Manila that could be attended by six million people; the largest gathering in the world.

He will also travel to Tacloban, the city devastated by Typhoon Haiyan in 2013 which killed almost 7,500 people. There he will meet survivors and offer prayers for the victims.

Pope Paul VI was stabbed in the stomach and neck on his visit to the country in 1970 by a would be assassin dressed as a priest.

A week before Pope John Paul II's visit in 1995 authorities discovered a plot by Muslim extremists to kill him.

This year the government is taking no chances and has deployed 40,000 security personnel for the visit.


23.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Charlie Hebdo Staff: We Will Not Give In

Journalists from satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo have held a news conference ahead of the publication of a special 'survivor's edition'.

The magazine is to publish its new edition with a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed on its front cover.

Mohammed is said to be depicted crying and holding a placard with the words "I am Charlie".

Above him is the slogan "All is Forgiven".

The Charlie Hebdo staff who put the issue together said they wanted Mohammed on the cover to show they would not "cede" to extremists wanting to silence them.

Staff said they planned to print as many as three million copies of the magazine, the usual print run is 60,000. 

Gerard Biard, editor-in-chief at Charlie Hebdo, said the new edition was produced "with pain and with joy". 

Staff said there was "no doubt" of the future of the magazine despite saying they would take a temporary break from publishing after the new issue.

The new edition will be published in multiple languages including French, Spanish, Italian, English and Arabic and will be available on the shelves for two weeks.

France has been shaken to its core by the bloodshed that began with a jihadist assault on the offices of the magazine on January 7 and ended in a deadly hostage drama at a Jewish supermarket two days later.

Charlie Hebdo, which lampoons religion indiscriminately, had received threats after depicting Mohammed before, and its offices were firebombed in 2011.

Seventeen people lost their lives in the wave of terrorist attacks across Paris last week.


23.12 | 0 komentar | Read More
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