ISIS Releases Video Purporting To Show Paris Attackers

The propaganda footage claims to show images and last statements of nine people who took part in the attacks.

CAIRO (Reuters) - A video published on Sunday by the media center of Islamic State claimed to show images and last statements of nine of the people who took part in the Paris attacks that killed 130 people on Nov. 13.

Reuters could not independently verify the authenticity of the footage, which showed the men delivering anti-Western diatribes and concluded with an apparent threat to attack Britain.

Al-Hayat Media, the media center of Islamic State, released a video about the Paris attacks.
Al-Hayat Media, the media center of Islamic State, released a video about the Paris attacks.
Al-Hayat Media

The French Foreign Ministry declined to comment on the video. There was no immediate comment from the Prime Minister's office, and Reuters was not immediately able to reach officials at the Interior Ministry.

The video was uploaded to Islamic State's official Telegram channel and shows some of the attackers wearing camouflage fatigues in a desert location, before the time of the Paris attacks.

Several of them are shown beheading hostages of the ultra-hardline militant group, a tactic they have frequently used.

The video shows footage of the Paris attacks as well as imagery of some of the attackers training in a desert location.
The video shows footage of the Paris attacks as well as imagery of some of the attackers training in a desert location.
Al-Hayat Media

"These are the last messages of the nine lions of the caliphate who were mobilized from their lairs to make a whole country, France, get down on its knees," a narrator in the video says.

On the night of Nov. 13 nine men, split into three groups, attacked a sports stadium, a string of cafes and a concert hall. An arrest warrant has been issued for another man, Salah Abdeslam, who fled to Belgium the following day.

Images from the video show first responders of the Paris terror attacks as targets for more violence.
Images from the video show first responders of the Paris terror attacks as targets for more violence.
Al-Hayat Media

The attackers are identified in the video by noms de guerre referring to their nationalities: three French, four Belgian and two Iraqis, referred to as Ali al-Iraqi and Ukashah al-Iraqi.

The two could be the suicide bombers who tried to attack the Stade de France stadium. They carried Syrian passports assumed to be forged and could not be formally identified. Seven other dead attackers have already been identified.

The video, which features beheadings and video-game stylized edits, also included the message: "Whoever stands in the ranks of kafir (infidels) will be a target for our swords."
The video, which features beheadings and video-game stylized edits, also included the message: "Whoever stands in the ranks of kafir (infidels) will be a target for our swords."
Al-Hayat Media

The video showed footage of British Prime Minister David Cameron expressing solidarity with the French people after the attacks, and concluded by flashing up a slogan on the screen saying: "Whoever stands in the ranks of kafir (infidels) will be a target for our swords."

A spokesman for British Prime Minister David Cameron said he had no immediate comment.

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