A Decade After Bataclan, France Is More Divided than Ever
Commemorations recall the 130 killed and 350 wounded in 2015 attacks as France faces rising Islamist violence, youth radicalization, and increasing social and political divisions, officials say.
7 Articles
7 Articles
A decade after the Bataclan attacks, France is still grappling with how to remember
In the 2015 attacks, 130 people were killed, including at the Bataclan concert hall. France is still wrestling with how to remember the deadliest attack on its soil in modern history and how to live with it.
Europe’s Spiritual Battle: The Bataclan Massacre 10 Years Later
A decade has passed since the night of November 13, 2015—the night when the heart of Paris was pierced by a wave of coordinated terrorist attacks that claimed the lives of 130 people. Among the bloodiest of these was the massacre at the Bataclan concert hall, where 90 concertgoers were gunned down in cold blood. A single photograph from that night has stayed with me over the years. It was taken just minutes before the attack began—an image of j…
These days, France has reinforced the security apparatus in the streets. There have been increased controls at the parties and in the concert halls on the occasion of the tenth anniversary of the Bataclan attacks. That massacre was part of a chain of synchronized attacks in Paris in which 130 people were killed and hundreds of injured. Since then, the country's anti-terrorist policy has taken a turn and some exceptional measures have been normal…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources lean Left, 50% of the sources lean Right
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium





