French police were trying to verify if the suspected commander of the attacks on Paris was among those killed and arrested in a massive police assault in the capital. (Reuters Photo)
Paris:
French police were trying to verify today if the suspected commander of the attacks on Paris was among those killed and arrested in a massive police assault in the capital.
Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said telephone surveillance and witness statements had led police to believe that Belgian terrorist Abdelhamid Abaaoud was in an apartment in Saint-Denis in northern Paris.
Anti-terrorist police flooded the streets near the building and soldiers were also drafted in for an operation that lasted around seven hours.
The prosecutor said at the end of the operation that investigations following Friday's attacks allowed police "to obtain telephonic surveillance and witness testimony which led us to believe that Abaaoud was likely to be in an apartment in Saint-Denis".
But he added: "Nobody has been able to enter the building so forensic police have not started their work."
"It is impossible to give the identities" of the two suspected terrorists killed in the assault, he said. The dead included a woman who detonated explosives and blew herself up.
Police launched their assault before dawn in the area close to the Stade de France stadium where three suicide bombers blew themselves up on Friday night, killing one person.
Other gunmen wearing explosives belts had attacked a concert hall, bars and restaurants in a trendy eastern district of Paris, killing 129 people.
Abaaoud, a 28-year-old from Brussels of Moroccan origin, has been linked to a series of Islamic extremist plots and recruitment efforts in Europe over the past two years and had bragged of how he had avoided arrest.
He has been photographed in Syria and was believed to have been in contact with a suspect on the run after the Paris attacks, Salah Abdeslam.
Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said telephone surveillance and witness statements had led police to believe that Belgian terrorist Abdelhamid Abaaoud was in an apartment in Saint-Denis in northern Paris.
Anti-terrorist police flooded the streets near the building and soldiers were also drafted in for an operation that lasted around seven hours.
The prosecutor said at the end of the operation that investigations following Friday's attacks allowed police "to obtain telephonic surveillance and witness testimony which led us to believe that Abaaoud was likely to be in an apartment in Saint-Denis".
But he added: "Nobody has been able to enter the building so forensic police have not started their work."
"It is impossible to give the identities" of the two suspected terrorists killed in the assault, he said. The dead included a woman who detonated explosives and blew herself up.
Police launched their assault before dawn in the area close to the Stade de France stadium where three suicide bombers blew themselves up on Friday night, killing one person.
Other gunmen wearing explosives belts had attacked a concert hall, bars and restaurants in a trendy eastern district of Paris, killing 129 people.
Abaaoud, a 28-year-old from Brussels of Moroccan origin, has been linked to a series of Islamic extremist plots and recruitment efforts in Europe over the past two years and had bragged of how he had avoided arrest.
He has been photographed in Syria and was believed to have been in contact with a suspect on the run after the Paris attacks, Salah Abdeslam.
Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world