11月20日CNN聽力:法國警方在巴黎郊區睜開突襲行為
Wherever you're watching CNN STUDENT NEWS,thank you for taking 10 minutes for our dailyupdate of current events.
I'm Carl Azuz.
First up, at 4:20 a.m. yesterday, heavily armedFrench police moved in on an apartment building in asuburb of northern Paris.
They were looking for a relative of this man, Abdelhamid Abaaoud.
He's a Frenchman who's believed to be the ringleader of last week's terrorist attacks in Paristhat left 129 people dead.
A wiretap reportedly helped French investigators overhear a phone conversation.
It indicated that Abaaoud's cousin was at the apartment.
As police closed in, gunfire erupted.
A female suicide bomber detonated her explosives and a floor collapsed.
We've managed to get unto a rooftop here from which we can see the building behind me.
I'm just going to duck out and we can push in and take a look at that apartment building thatwas focused of these raids.
We can see forensic experts had been moving around inside those rooms.
They've been taking photographs and you can see the aftermath of those blasts that wereheard.
All the windows had been blown out.
You can see the pockmarks of heavy weaponry around those windows.
This was one of hundreds of police operations in recent days.
Two people were killed in the raid, investigators are using DNA tests to figure out who thesuspects were.
Eight others were arrested.
A French official said judging by the weapons and the organization of the people in theapartment, they were prepared to act possibly in another terrorist attack.
French President Francois Hollande said the raid was proof that his country is at war with theISIS terrorist group, which claimed responsibility for the Paris attacks.
The French government has proposed extending the country's state of emergency for threemore months.
That would limit certain rights of residents and it would allow law enforcement to have morepower to conduct searches and hold people in police custody.
Investigators have found cellphones they believe the terrorists carried.
The attackers were apparently exploiting encryption technology to keep their plot secret.
One key to preventing future attacks is understanding how terrorists communicate.
They planned a coordinated, complex attack,
and there's new information on tight operational security and communication among theseterrorists.
Investigators have found evidence that the operatives tied to the Paris attackers frequentlychanged cellphones, switched cars, even searched for possibly listening devices.
And according to counterterrorism and intelligence officials, there's evidence that they usedencryption.
Maybe they're using encrypted messaging apps.
They do a very good job of hiding whatever you're saying for being intercepted by somebodywho, like a government.
Encryption, conversations chopped up into a jumble by a mathematical algorithms, code thatU.S. officials say is nearly impossible to crack.
We don't have the ability to break strong encryption.
And so, if they move to the mobile messaging app, we're going to lose them.
So, that's a huge worry.
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