Secretary of State John Kerry on Friday traveled to scenes of the recent attacks in Paris, almost a week after President Barack Obama neglected to visit the country that was rocked by terror resulting in the deaths of 17 people.
Kerry told French President François Hollande that Americans watched with awe the unity between the government and its citizens in the wake of the recent attacks.
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“We share the pain and the horror of everything you went through,” he said. “Once again, France’s commitment to freedom and passion of ideas has made an important statement to the world.”
Kerry and French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius laid a wreath outside of Hyper Cacher, the kosher supermarket where a gunman killed four people last Friday after seizing the store as shoppers prepared for the Sabbath. Police later killed the alleged shooter, 32-year-old Amedy Coulibaly, in a raid.
The two diplomats then walked to a makeshift memorial wall adorned with letters and drawings outside of the Charlie Hebdo offices, the French satirical newspaper where brothers Chérif and Säid Kouachi allegedly stormed and killed 12 people last Wednesday. Two days later, officials killed the Kouachi brothers following a standoff at a printing shop north of the country’s capital.
Earlier this week, the White House failed to address Obama’s whereabouts last Sunday, when more than 40 world leaders gathered with 3.5 million citizens at solidarity rallies, which were the largest in French history.
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