One year on, France remembers victims killed at kosher supermarket

Commemorations will culminate in a public event on Sunday in the Place de la Republique


Afp January 09, 2016
French President Francois Hollande (L) and mayor of Montrouge Jean-Loup Metton unveil a plaque honoring late policewoman Clarissa Jean-Philippe in Montrouge south of Paris, on January 9, 2016. PHOTO: AFP

PARIS: France on Saturday paid hommage to four Jewish hostages killed at a kosher supermarket in Paris a year after a spate of jihadist attacks that began with a deadly assault on the Charlie Hebdo weekly.

Tributes were also paid to Clarissa Jean-Philippe, a young policewoman who was also killed by the gunman who went on to carry out the supermarket siege, with President Francois Hollande unveiling a plaque in her honour in the Paris suburb of Montrouge where she died.

Hundreds of French mosques open their doors to the public

A total of 17 people were killed in the January 2015 attacks which rocked France and touched off a wave of extremist violence that reached a head in November when a group of gunmen and suicide bombers unleashed mayhem in Paris, killing 130.

The 26-year-old policewoman was killed on January 8 by Amedy Coulibaly, the gunman who went on to attack the Hyper Cacher supermarket in east Paris.  Three shoppers and an employee were killed by Coulibaly before he was killed in a police raid.

A gathering to remember the victims will be held outside the supermarket after sundown on Saturday organised by the Jewish umbrella group CRIF.

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"Despite continuing traumatic feelings, life has returned to normal with a renewed sense of fraternity," said Haim Korsia, France's grand rabbi.

Also this weekend, mosques around the country are opening their doors to visitors in a move to "highlight the real values of Islam, to set straight the cliches about links to violence and terrorism," Anouar Kbibech, head of the French Council of the Muslim Faith, told AFP.

Commemorations will culminate in a public event on Sunday in the Place de la Republique, the vast square that became the rallying point for "Je Suis Charlie" solidarity movement, and for similar movements after the deadly November 13 attacks.

There, a 10-metre (35-foot) oak will be planted as a "tree of remembrance".

Veteran French rocker Johnny Hallyday will perform "Un Dimanche de Janvier" (One January Sunday), a song recalling the vast mobilisation that saw 1.6 million people march in Paris on January 11, 2015.

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