As France marks the 10th anniversary of the bataclan killings, another reminder is coming of the existence of the jihadist threat.
A former girlfriend of the Jihadist who survived the November 2015 attack was arrested on suspicion of planning her own violent act.
The Woman – A 27-year-old French convert to Islam named Maëva B – began a relationship with SAAH in Belgium on the border of 2022.
When the prison guards found out that Abdeslam had used a USB key containing jihadist propaganda, they traced its origin to the faces Maëva B faced.
Then the detectives on Maëva B’s own computer and phone, where they found evidence that he was planning a jihadist attack with the judgment of two alleged companions.
As France celebrates 10 years since the worst attack in its modern history, the arrest focuses on the enemy’s thoughts that have not gone away.
RabaeOn the night of 13 November 2015, jihadist gunmen and suicide bombers carried out a series of attacks that led to a bloody attack on the Eastern Concert Hall in Eastern Paris.
Before that, three suicide bombers blew themselves up outside the stade de France where a football International was being played. Then some of the gang opened fire with Kalashnikovs on people drinking in bars and cafés not far from the bataclan.
There, a performance by the American death metal group Eagles has begun, when three jihadists burst into flames and set fire to an auditorium. They took the hostages and then made themselves sweat while the police moved.

A total of 130 people were killed, 90 in the bataclan, and more than 400 were treated in the hospital. Countless others have suffered psychological trauma.
The word bataclan has since become a byword in France for serious Islamist attacks, the same way 9/11 did in the US.
Although there have been other attacks since, such as the wonderful lorry massa in July
Ten years on, a lot has changed. The disappearance of the Islamic State (is) group as a main force in Syria and Iraq means that the preparation, planning and carrying out of complex terrorist projects has significantly decreased.
RabaeThe attackers of the bataclan are young men who are mainly from North Africa Origin, recruited in Belgium and France who are trained in the territory of the Middle East, who are transferred to the Middle East, who are transferred to the Middle East, who are transferred to the Middle East, who return to Europe hidden by a large flow of migrants.
Either way they can tap into a network of supporters who offer replacements, transport and money.
According to leading Middle East Expert Gelles Keeples, intelligence services have also been effective in preventing online radicalization.
“Now they have access to these resources … which allows them to find many individual initiatives, which are often not very sophisticated … and stop them before they hit,” he said in an interview with Le Figaro.
But according to Mr Kepel, the current danger comes from what he calls “ambient jihadism”.
“Today’s threat at home is growing and is much younger. It feeds on friendship and social networks of the same mind, without people giving and following orders,” he said.
The threat is even greater, he believes, because it is more colorful – with events in Gaza and Israel having a “traumatic effect” on the minds of many citizens and “exploited by businessmen of anger”.
The current political crisis in France has also struck disaster, he argued, with an impotent presidency giving a one-party parliament where extremists on the left and right are growing.
“When what separates us becomes more important than what unites us as people in France is the national consensus, there will be a stronger deterrence,” he said.
Magali Cohen / Hans Lucas / AFPThursday’s celebration will be held throughout the day at various sites of the attack, ending with the opening of a 13 November garden near Paris City Hall.
When night falls, the Eiffel Tower is bathed in the red, white and blue of the French Flag.
The French media is full of accounts and memories, with survivors describing how their lives changed.
In an unexpected development, Sala Abdeslam allowed through his lawyer that he would be prepared to co-operate in any effort to “rehabilitate victims to discuss the impact of a crime.
The idea is considered by some families – but others are against the opposition.
According to Laurent SOllySAA, a cartoonist also known as Riss, who was shot and injured in the Charlie Hebdo attack on children in the Bataclan, Abdeslam’s offer is “perverse”.
“Restorative justice exists for other types of crimes – common crimes,” he said.
“But terrorism is not a common crime. Sala Abdeslam wants us to think that his crime is like any other. But it is not.”


