Europe 1 with AFP 4:08 p.m., November 13, 2022

While the trial of the November 13 attacks ended on June 29, Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne paid tribute to the victims this Sunday.

In the presence of Anne Hidalgo, mayor of Paris, and associations of victims, a minute of silence was observed at the scene of the attacks.

Seven years later, Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne paid tribute this Sunday to the victims of the attacks of November 13, 2015, by observing a minute of silence at the sites of the attacks in Paris and Saint-Denis.

The Stade de France, the terraces of Carillon and Petit Cambodge, La Bonne Bière, Comptoir Voltaire, La Belle Equipe and finally the Bataclan concert hall.

Reading of the names of those killed, laying of wreaths, minute of silence, the ceremony was repeated throughout the morning in tribute to the 130 dead and more than 350 injured in the worst terrorist attacks in the history of France, claimed by the Islamic State (IS) organization.

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10 months of hearing

The historic trial of these attacks ended on June 29, after ten months of hearings.

The special assize court in Paris sentenced Salah Abdeslam, the only surviving member of the commandos, to life imprisonment, the heaviest sentence in the criminal code.

His 19 co-accused (six of whom five were presumed dead were tried in their absence) were sentenced to terms ranging from two years' imprisonment to life.

The Prime Minister was surrounded this Sunday in particular by the mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo and the presidents of the associations of victims Life for Paris Arthur Dénouveaux, and 13onze15 Philippe Duperron.

"I am thinking today of all the victims of the attacks (...). Of all these mown lives. To all those who live every day without a loved one. To all the survivors. Time does not erases neither the memory nor the pain", tweeted François Hollande, who was head of state during these attacks which had sown terror in the country.