


Pierre Montfort lives close to a Cambodian restaurant on Rue Bichat, where one of seven attacks took place in a night of bloodshed not seen in decades.
Another witness described the scene: "For a moment, we
could only see the flames from the gun. We were scared, how did we know he wasn't
going to shoot the windows?"
Florence said she arrived by scooter a minute or so after.
- "It was surreal, everyone was on the ground. No one was moving inside the Petit Cambodge restaurant and everyone was on the ground in bar Carillon," she said.
- "It was very calm -- people didn't understand what was going on. A young girl was being carried in the arms of a young man. She seemed to be dead."
- On Rue Charonne, a little further east, fire engines drive past, their sirens wailing.
- A man said he heard shots ring out, in sharp bursts, for two or three minutes.
- "I saw several bloody bodies on the ground. I don't know if they were dead," he said.
- "There was blood everywhere," said another witness.
Standing nearby, a tearful man said his sister had been
killed. At his side, his mother burst into tears and collapsed into his arms.

"They won't let us pass," he said, pointing at the
intersection 50 metres (yards) away.
Further east, near the Bataclan concert hall and not far
from the scene of another deadly attack in January on the offices of satirical
French magazine Charlie Hebdo, the area was on lock down.

"My wife was in Bataclan, it's a catastrophe,"
said one man as he tried to run into the site but was blocked by the police
cordon.

"We heard explosions 25 minutes after the start of the
match. It continued as normal. I thought it was a joke," said Ludovic
Klein, 37, who came from Limoges to watch
the match with his 10 year old son.
Source: AFP
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