Paris attacks: La Bonne Bire caf reopens 3 weeks after carnage - Action News
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Paris attacks: La Bonne Bire caf reopens 3 weeks after carnage

A caf where five people were killed by a squad of Islamic extremist gunmen terrorizing central Paris has reopened.

'It's time they open and that we continue life as it was before,' says nearby shopkeeper

Customers gather inside the caf on Friday, three week after the Paris terror attacks. At least 130 people were killed and hundreds injured in the attacks, when assailants shot at customers and pedestrians, including five at the caf. (Christophe Petit Tesson/EPA)

A caf where five people were killed by a squad of Islamic extremist gunmen terrorizing central Paris has reopened.

La BonneBire, a corner caf in the trendy central Paris district targeted by the gunmen, opened for business again on Friday morning. Since the attacks, the shuttered cafe has been piled high with flowers, like the other sites of the Nov. 13 attacks that left 130 people dead.

Paule Zlotnik, a neighbouring shopkeeper, praised the decision: "It's time they open and that we continue life as it was before."

In surveillance video seen by The Associated Press, two gunmen in black calmly approached La Bonne Birethat night, firing deliberately on the outdoor tables before turning back toward a car that can be seen rolling slowly behind them.

Also Friday, European Union interior ministers met in Brussels seeking to clinch a deal on sharing airline passenger information, which France says is a vital security tool for tracking extremists.

Arriving to chair the meeting, Luxembourg Deputy Prime Minister tienne Schneider said:"If we don't get agreement today, it will be extremely difficult to get any agreement at all."
Bullet holes are seen in the terrace windows of Bonne Biere on Nov. 15. (Ian Langsdon/EPA)

The deal would give EU law-enforcement agencies access to information gathered by airlines like names, travel dates, itinerary, credit card and contact details.

Experts have narrowed down differences between security concerns and privacy rights but could not agree on whether to store the traveller information for six months, or nine months as France demands.

French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve described the system as "indispensable in the fight against terrorism."