(Radio France) If the testimony of those hurt or bereaved in the November 2015 attacks has been generally characterised by tragic dignity, Wednesday’s hearing was marked by an outburst of anger.
After a day devoted to those who suffered at the Stade de France, the court turned its attention to the survivors and the families of the victims at the Carillon bar and the Petit Cambodge restaurant in central Paris. Thirteen people lost their lives in a hail of automatic gunfire; dozens were injured.
There are those who, six years on, are still trying to rebuild the lives they would rather live. For whom every day is a fight. For whom the simple claim that they can stand upright and move forward is a hard-won achievement.
And there are those who are terribly, noisily angry.