PARIS:
The Eiffel Tower´s lights will be turned off at midnight Tuesday in
homage to victims of the Manchester Arena attack that claimed at least
22 lives, the Paris mayor said.
In Britain´s deadliest terror attack in
12 years, police said a man detonated a bomb in the northwest English
city at a concert by US pop star Ariana Grande late Monday.
The Eiffel Tower similarly went dark
after recent jihadist attacks in London, Saint Petersburg and Stockholm,
as well as after the November 2015 attacks in Paris and in support of
the people of the Syrian city of Aleppo in December 2016.
"By targeting Manchester, the terrorists
also wanted to attack our shared values, our unflagging attachment to
democracy, freedom, humanism and community," Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo
said in a statement.
"In the face of this blind and
persistent threat, cities have the duty to form a united front," she
added. To "these children, these young people, their parents who have
been struck by terrorism... I want to tell them that Parisians, who have
known such an ordeal, are by their sides."
Concerts and other events planned in Paris in the coming days will "of course" go ahead, she said.
"It´s a way of showing that we are
standing tall and our way of life is unshakeable. It´s the best possible
response to those who are driven only by fanatism and hatred."
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