In a file of several articles, MediaPart tells the events that led the supervisors of the French prison of Nanterre to believe that the detainees were aware of the imminent attack on the eve of November 13 on Bataclan, especially since two of them turned out to be connected from their cell to one of the killers of Bataclan. .

Bataclan is a notoriously famous French theater after a terrorist attack in Paris on November 13, 2015, which killed 130 people and was claimed by the Islamic State. The Bataclan concert hall, bars and restaurants And the sports stadium of France.

The site began a series of articles on what he called the jihadists detained by the arrival of prisoner Mohammed al-Abrini, who was handed over to Belgium overcrowded Nanterre prison, before being placed in solitary confinement, especially as it came with a memo explaining that he is a high-level detainee and not just an ordinary detainee.

Since this prisoner is one of the key elements in the attacks of 13 November in Paris and 22 March in Brussels, and will appear before the investigating judge in charge of combating "terrorism", the Office of the Prosecutor in Paris and the Department of Prisons assured the head of Nanterre prison "to be under guard" Tight even while in his detention, "expressing fear of" possible support him inside the prison. "

An unfamiliar request
The facts date back to November 12, 2015, when "the detainees in the evening asked for a TV the next day," two members of the prison administration told Mediabart who asked not to be named.

The website pointed out that "extremist Islamists" usually do not watch "infidels" only when the news of jihad in the spotlight, however, some paid a monthly subscription of ten euros to be in front of the small screen on November 13, according to the site information, Although not including any of the isolation zone in Nanterre.

According to a senior prison official, this concerns several people who have caught their attention, and they later suggested that these prisoners were "alerted to what would happen" before it happened.

After searching the cell of detainee No. 41235 Mohamed Hattay, sentenced to eight years for his association with the Strasbourg jihadist group, they discovered that the prisoner had made several calls - in conjunction with the first bombings near the stadium of France - with another detainee, and also found the secret phone, which was allowed to comment during part of the night Terrorist attacks.

A cell phone search later revealed that Hatay received a Skype message two months ago on September 9, titled "You will soon see the unthinkable".

French gather to mourn victims near Bataclan Hall three days after the massacre at the Getty Theater

Investigations also revealed that Hatay continued from inside his cell in 2015 with other prisoners known to be members of the Islamic extremist movement, and with jihadists still in Syria and Iraq, including his childhood friend Fuad Muhammad al-Akkad, who was proven to be one of the three suicide bombers involved in the Bataclan massacre.

The website referred to another prisoner, Karim El Akkad, the aforementioned brother of Fouad, who told him on August 18 that he had four days left before saying goodbye to him on August 23. "It's time to say goodbye, you understand? [...] Take care of my mother." And from his cell, Karim promised his brother to follow his steps "preceded me to God," but "I will join you soon."

Prisoners are more aware than those present
Karim sent letters via WhatsApp to Nanterre Mohamed Hatay and his brother Ali, who is being held in Villepinte, telling them that his brother had left that morning, but did not know when he would be in charge of the operation or where.

In another conversation, the detainees invoke Abu Qaitel, the jihadist title of Sami Amimur, and then mention Fuad Mohammed al-Akkad, Ismail Omar Mostafai and Sami Amimur, the three men killed on November 13, 90 people in Bataklan.

Karim also spoke with another detainee about the infiltration of dozens of jihadists from the Islamic State to the countries of Europe using the "migrant route", to thwart the surveillance of various intelligence services, according to MediaPart.

The website commented that the detainees were better aware of the covert operations of the Islamic State than the men fighting inside it, especially as the survivors of the operation were terrorists in their hideout near Molenbeek received a letter from a prisoner in Belgium asking them to leave "because the police knew their whereabouts."

Phone code 1311
Even a year and a half after the massacre, the newspaper says, five phones were discovered and confiscated from the detainee Mohammed al-Akkad on September 9, 2018 after an X-ray examination for his personal purposes.

In the cell of Mohamed Hattay in Nanterre Prison, the Samsung device was discovered without a card on February 15, 2016. The data mining program revealed that its lock code 1311, which, according to a police officer, indicates the date of November 13, when the Bataclan massacre took place, Hatay denied that he was the author of the code, although he acknowledges that he used the phone given to him by another prisoner who said he did not give his name.

The site listed a number of contacts that show that there is a broad and interconnected network involving some prisoners, and is well aware of what is managed by "terrorists" through which they exchange information, and may be issued through them.