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Paris terror plot mastermind 'is DEAD'. French commandos 'killed Belgian ISIS leader during gun battle' as police remove bodies from siege apartment
The mastermind behind the Paris massacre, Abdelhamid Abaaoud (pictured top right), is dead, according to two senior intelligence officials. The 27-year-old Belgian jihadi leader is said to have been killed by French commandos when a flat was raided in the early hours of this morning. More than 100 armed officers stormed a flat in Saint-Denis believing Abaaoud was inside with six other terrorists. Security sources said earlier today it prevented a new ISIS double terror attack on Paris. Eyewitnesses said a blonde female suicide bomber who blew herself up during a raid by French police screamed 'Help me, help me' moments before detonating a device as snipers opened fire. This afternoon police were seen removing two bodies from the apartment (pictured left).
Paris terror plot mastermind 'is DEAD'.
French commandos 'killed Belgian ISIS leader during gun battle' as police remove bodies from siege apartment
- French police and special forces launch 4.25am operation to storm Saint-Denis flat containing seven Paris terrorists
- Mastermind behind Friday's massacres, Abdelhamid Abaaoud, 27, believed to be inside Saint-Denis apartment
- Two senior European intelligence officials say Abaaoud was killed in the flat raid but this has yet to be confirmed
- Female suicide bomber who fired AK-47 at police believed to be his wife or cousin. Other suspect killed by grenade
- Woman, named as Hasna Aitboulahcen by unconfirmed reports, is said to have screamed 'Help me, help' at police
- Five people taken alive from flat and arrested as well as two others 'nearby' as stand-off ended after six hours
- Security sources claimed they were 'fourth unit' from ISIS cell set to attack Paris' main airport and shopping centre
- Two of arrested plotters were both shot in the arm and are being operated on at a secure hospital in Bobigny, Paris
- Paris prosecutor refuses to confirm if Abaaoud was in the safehouse and if he was captured or died in the siege
- At least five police have been injured in the ferocious gunfight and the terrorists killed a police dog called Diesel
- Witnesses told MailOnline there were periods of intense machine gun fire and at least seven large explosions
- Man who rented flat to 'two Belgians' is arrested and claims: 'I didn't know they were terrorists. It was a favour'
- Alert sent to all European police forces warning fugitive gunman Salah Abdeslam may be driving Citroen Xsara
The mastermind behind the Paris massacre, Abdelhamid Abaaoud, is dead, according to two senior intelligence officials.
The 27-year-old Belgian jihadi leader is said to have been killed by French commandos when a flat was raided in the early hours of this morning.
More than 100 armed officers stormed the flat in Saint-Denis believing Abaaoud was inside with six other terrorists.
The French authorities have still not confirmed if he was there or if he is dead or alive but two European intelligence officials told the Washington Post that he had been killed inside the building.
French prosecutor Francois Molins said this evening that the two terrorists who died in the raid, a female suicide bomber who blew herself up and another jihadi killed by a grenade, had not yet been identified.
But he revealed that neither Abaaoud or Salah Abdeslam, who has been on the run since Friday's attacks, were among those arrested.
Security sources said earlier today that the raid, which saw terrorists fire around 5,000 rounds during an hour-long shoot out, prevented a new ISIS double terror attack on Paris.
Mr Molins said: 'A new team of terrorists was neutralised and all indications are that given their arms, their organisational structure and their determination, the commando [of jihadis] could have struck.'
It came as it emerged the blonde female suicide bomber who blew herself up screamed ‘Help me, help me’ at police moments before detonating a device as snipers opened fire, eyewitnesses claimed today.
Unconfirmed reports have named the female terrorist, believed to be Abaaoud's jihadi bride or cousin, as Hasna Aitboulahcen.
She blew herself up during a six-hour siege where five people were taken alive and arrested. Two more suspects were held 'nearby', while bodies were this evening seen being removed from the apartment building.
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Bodies have this evening been removed from the flat raided by French police in Saint-Denis where Paris massacre mastermind Abdelhamid Abaaoud, 27, was believed to be inside with six other terrorists. The French authorities will not say if he was there or if he is dead or alive
Aftermath: A forensics squad inspects a blood-covered mattress dumped in the glass-covered street outside the Saint-Denis flat used by seven suspected terrorists
One of the bodies is removed from inside the apartment building (left) and loaded into a hearse (right) following the six-hour siege
Drama: The terror suspect was dragged from the building and broken glass with no trousers on - presumably in case he was wearing a suicide belt - as police trained their weapons on the flat
Mystery suspect: Hooded police officers pull a man arrested in the gun battle through crowds of other officers and soldiers as the Saint-Denis siege ended after six hours
A member of the French judicial police is pictured inspecting the apartment raided by special forces after a six-hour stand-off this morning
Threat: Soldiers guard Charles de Gaulle airport's Metro station today, left, amid fears that ISIS had planned to target the transport hub and the Quatre Temps shopping centre in the city's business district, Le Défense, also today, right
Arrests: Seven people in total have been arrested in the operation including two people away from the under siege flat, left outside a shopping centre and right near the apartment block
State broadcaster France 2 has claimed the group was a 'fourth unit' on top of the three who killed 129 on Friday and were planning simultaneous attacks with AK-47s and bombs on Charles de Gaulle airport and the Quatre Temps shopping centre in the city's business district, Le Défense.
The Saint-Denis siege started at 4.25am when SWAT teams and special forces surrounded the building after security services hunting for Abaaoud spent days watching flats and tapping phones.
Kalashnikovs were being used against the security forces, but after an an hour and a half of furious exchanges, there was a lull in the fighting.
It was then that a woman 'with long blonde hair' appeared at a third floor apartment window.
An eyewitness identified only as Christian, 20, told Le Parisien: ‘During a ten or fifteen minute lull in the shooting I heard a woman shouting: "Help, help, help me!"
‘The police asked her to identify herself, and to show herself. She held her hands up but she didn’t reveal her face.
‘She withdrew her hands out of sight, and then put them up again several times.
‘The police shouted at her: "Keep your hands in the air!" They told her: “We’re going to shoot.” The shooting resumed. The police were firing from the roof of the building opposite. Suddenly there was an enormous explosion. It was probably the woman who blew herself up.
‘The windows shattered. Lots of objects from the apartment were thrown into the street, pieces of human flesh as well. They are still there. You can see a bit of the head, of skin, of ribs.’
Thibault Chaffotte, another witness, told Liberation: ‘I heard police talking about a blonde woman with long hair. I believe this was the suicide bomber.
They told her: 'Don’t lower your arms. Put your hands in the air. Afterwards, there was a very loud explosion. I think that’s when she activated her bomb. It was big. Many of the windows in the road shattered.’
A seven-year-old sniffer dog called Diesel sent into the block to look for booby traps was killed in the blast. Another terror suspect was killed by a grenade blast.
Investigation: After the siege ended this morning a huge team of forensics started work outside the flat - marking out spent bullets with numbers next to them with a bloodied blue mattress thrown out of the window of the building (bottom of picture)
Secretive: French medics were ordered to put up sheets as some seven people arrested were transferred to Bobigny hospital. Two have been shot in the arm and are being operated on at a secure hospital in Bobigny, Paris
Walking wounded: A police officer with an injured foot is one of at least five police who have been injured in the ferocious gunfight. The terrorists also shot and killed a seven-year-old specialist police dog Diesel, sent into the block
Protection: Armed officers hidden behind a bullet proof shield on wheels, left, and others in riot gear and bullet proof vests helped end the stand-off
In their sights: Police move in on the apartment where the female suicide bomber blew herself up after firing an AK-47 machine at officers. At least one other jihadi is also dead
Human cost: A sobbing woman, left, and a man carrying a baby in a pink coat and pyjamas, centre, are surrounded by dozens of masked and armed police evacuating residents from the siege street
Wanted men: It has been reported the target of the police siege in Saint-Denis was Abdelhamid Abaaoud (left), thought to be the mastermind behind the Paris attacks and Salah Abdeslam (right), who has been on the run since Friday's attacks
Map: The raid was on a flat in the north of Paris - close to the three attacks close to the Stade de France - and not far from the shootings and suicide attacks on Bataclan and a series of bars, restaurants and cafes
At least five police were injured in the ferocious gunfight including one shot in the foot seen being carried from the scene. Witnesses told MailOnline their street was 'turned into a warzone' after long periods of intense machine gun fire and at least seven large explosions, caused by the suicide bomber and hand grenades. There were no hostages involved.
It came a Europe-wide alert was put out for a Citroen Xsara car that could be carrying Salah Abdeslam, the fugitive wanted in the Paris attacks, a Spanish security official said.
It was sent by Spanish authorities to border control police in the north-eastern Catalonia region next to France. The security official confirmed the document was authentic but said the bulletin was sent to authorities across Europe and not only to Spain.
As the Saint-Denis siege ended after six hours this morning it was revealed:
- Paris massacres mastermind Abdelhamid Abaaoud, 27, was believed to be inside the safehouse at centre of the raid;
- Police and secret services were watching several flats in Saint-Denis and had tapped phones in the area before they swooped at 4.25am;
- Operation became more important after a tip-off that the Paris terror cell were about to launch a new attack on city's business district, La Defense;
- Two terror suspects have been killed. One was a female suicide bomber who blew herself up. French and Belgian media have reported she is Abaaoud's wife or a cousin. The other fatality was a man killed by a grenade;
- Two of the arrested terror plotters have been shot in the arm and are being operated on at a secure hospital in Bobigny, Paris;
- Seven people have been arrested. Five were held in the flat or the 'rubble' inside apartment block and two more were held nearby;
- Five police officers were injured. A Belgian Shepherd sniffer dog called Diesel was sent in to the block and killed by the terror cell;
- French government confirms that all 129 victims of Friday's attacks have now been identified;
- David Cameron tells MPs one Briton died – Nick Alexander - three have been released from hospital and further 15 being treated for trauma.
Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said authorities are still working to determine the fate of Abaaoud - and identify those killed and arrested. He said confirmed three suspected jihadis were held in the flat and two more 'as they tried to hide in the rubble' of the block.
He said: 'It is currently impossible to give the identify of those arrested, which is being verified. Everything will be done to work out who is who and thanks to forensics who and was in the apartment'.
Mr Molins said police began the raid on Wednesday after gathering information that he could be in a safehouse apartment in Saint-Denis. Mr Molins said the information was collected from tapped telephone conversations, surveillance and witness accounts.
He told reporters after the operation was over that authorities are still working to determine who was inside.
French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve arrived in Saint-Denis and said: 'I would like to pay tribute to all those involved in the operation, 110 in total, who acted with bravery and under heavy fire in conditions that they had never experienced before.
'I would also like to pay tribute to the cool-headedness of St Denis residents. They also contributed to the success of the operation'.
Armed police appeared on a street outside the Saint-Denis flat before dawn today and then at least three trucks of soldiers and special forces arrived as back up.
Witnesses told MailOnline said there were long periods of intense machine gun fire and at least seven large explosions.
Lotfi, a 50-year-old who was in the area, said: 'I heard police officers talking to a woman with long blonde hair.
'I think she was the kamikaze. They told her not to lower her arms, to keep her hands up in the air, and then there was a massive explosion. I think that's when she detonated her bomb. It really was a very loud explosion.
'Lots of windows on the street were shattered, and then the firefight started and it was going on nonstop.'
Lofti, who would not offer his surname, said he saw a police dog called Diesel blown to pieces. The German Shepherd was there to sniff out explosives.
One of the arrested suspects is the man who appears to have rented the flat to the terror cell.
Jawad Ben Dowt, 30, admitted in an interview near the under siege apartment on Rue de Corbillon he handed it over to two men 'who came from Belgium' two days ago.
He said: 'A friend of mine asked me to host two of his buddies for a few days.
'I said there was no mattress, they told me 'it's okay', they just wanted water and to pray. My friend said they were from Belgium.
'I was asked to a favour and I said yes. I was not aware that it was terrorists' - moments later police grabbed him and put him in handcuffs.
A female friend of his who was also held said she stayed there last week and described it as a 'squat' and said the Belgian men arrived on Monday.
A woman living below the under-siege flat with her young baby described being 'woken up by an explosion'.
She told French broadcaster BMFTV: 'I awoke to an explosion. After that I heard gun shots and there was lots of shooting. The terrorists were fighting at the police and the police were firing back.
'There were shots, explosions. We didn't know where to go. My son and I were in panic.
'There was dust falling from the ceiling because of the explosions. I kept shouting 'If you're from the police, please help me. I'm here with my baby. But they kept shooting and shooting'.
Small street: The siege took place on Rue du Corbillon - a narrow street linking two of Saint-Denis' main roads - where forensics teams are now gathering evidence against the terror suspects taken alive
Rush: Police with pistols drawn rush towards the apartment block while soldiers with machine guns peer around the corner close to the siege
Terror attacks: Elite police units were also involved in the ongoing siege which saw two jihadis die, five suspects arrested with several more still hiding in a rented squat
Ready: Five hours after the siege started at around 4.30am police reinforcements continued to run down towards the flat
On high alert: Five men holed up inside the apartment were arrested, while two others were detained near the location of the raid
Huge numbers: At least 100 police officers and soldiers are understood to have taken part in the operation in northern Paris suburb of Saint Denis
Brute force: Witnesses told MailOnline said that more than 100 armed police and special forces in full battle gear were taking part in the operation to 'neutralise' the terrorists
Units: Teams of armed police appeared on a street outside the flat before dawn followed by several trucks of soldiers and special forces as back up
Last stand? Anti-terror police officers with bullet-proof shields take up positions behind a bar during the siege in Saint Denis, a northern suburb of Paris, as they stormed a flat containing up to six Paris massacre suspects
Fears: Armed police stop and search a man in the street near the apartment as it emerged that a female suicide bomber has blown herself up and another suspect was killed by a grenade. There have been seven arrests so far
Armed: Police officers take up positions in Saint Denis while surrounding a flat where the Paris killers are believed to be holed up in northern Paris
Dangerous: Police using bullet-proof shields point their guns towards the sieged building as more than 100 police and special forces stormed the block. Five officers have been injured and a police dog was killed
Gun battle: There was a heavy exchange of gunfire during the operation in the Paris suburb of Saint-Denis in the early hours of this morning involving specialist anti-terror units and special forces
Danger: Shots were exchanged for long periods in the large police operation in Saint-Denis which began early this morning
Operation: Police and the French army (pictured) surrounded a flat containing suspected Paris terrorists including the mastermind of the attacks
Police sources: Agence France-Presse reported that the target of the police siege in Saint-Denis is Abdelhamid Abaaoud, thought to be the mastermind behind the Paris attacks. It had been thought that he was in Syria
Benson Hoi, 29, a software engineer, lives just 100 metres away from the apartment which is under siege and was woken up by the sound of gunfire at around 4am this morning.
He says he is terrified one of the suspects may blow themselves up, hitting the residents hiding in the surrounding apartments.
Mr Hoi told MailOnline: 'I am right next to the scene and at the moment I can see about 100 police officers, soldiers and at least 50 police cars.'
He said he initially thought fireworks were going off when he was woken by the sound of gunfire, but when he checked Twitter he realised what was happening outside his home.
He said: 'After about 15 minutes of panicking I decided to live stream what was happening outside so the world could see what was happening. Police were telling people to stay away from their windows so i left my phone on the window sill.
'I can still hear police shouting on the street now. I heard seven explosions a few minutes ago.
'At first some people were leaving their apartments to see what was going on, and the police chucked them back into their apartments.'
He said they have not been told anything else, and police are eurging residents to remain inside away from their windows and doors.
He said: 'I'm still worrying for my life. If those people are suicide bombers I'm not exactly safe.
'For the sake of common sense I'm staying away from the windows, but I do not feel safe.'
Baptiste Marie, a 26-year-old journalist who lives near the scene of the stand-off, said: 'It started with an explosion. Then there was second big explosion. Then two more explosions. There was an hour of gunfire'.
Riot police were clearing the streets early Wednesday, pointing guns at curious residents to move them off the roads and telling them to go home.
Mr Marie said the officers seemed nervous - 'you could see it in their eyes, ' he said.
Residents said they were first woken by an explosion which shook the neighbourhood at about 4am (3am GMT) as police surrounded the flat, although it is not known what led them to the building.
Witnesses say this was followed by an hour of automatic gunfire and explosions as an intense firefight ensued between police and the suspects holed up in the apartment.
Neighbour Amine Guizani said: 'They were shooting for an hour. Nonstop. There were grenades. It was going, stopping. Kalashnikovs. Starting again.'
Teams of armed police appeared on a street outside the Saint-Denis flat before dawn today and then at least three trucks of soldiers and special forces arrived as back up.
Stay away: Residents have been told to hide their homes and away from windows and some were also been evacuated
Swathes of officers: A special armed response unit took part in the raid and several police officers have been hurt
First of the scene: These officers were among the first to face the terrorists after days of surveillance on the flat
Forst light: French special police forces secure the area as shots are exchanged in Saint-Denis before dawn this morning
Defence: Armed police and a police helicopter have secured the area surrounding the apartment where a group of six were thought to have barricaded themselves in
Police cordoned off the area nearby, including a pedestrian zone lined with shops and 19th-century apartment buildings, and cleared people from the streets, pointing guns at curious residents to move them off the roads.
Sporadic bangs and blast continued and at 7.30am French time at least seven explosions shook the centre of Saint-Denis.
A woman who may be Abaaoud's wife is said to have fired her AK-47 at police before blowing herself up with a suicide vest as an assault squad stormed the apartment block. The siege ended at 10.34am.
Residents have been told to stay in their homes and away from windows and some have been moved to a temporary shelter in the town hall. Police have confirmed that several officers have been hurt.
Caroline Chomienne, who runs a film school, Altermedia, in St Denis, was trapped in the building next to where the assault took place.
'We'd been working all night on a film and my staff had been gone for some time when around 4.20am I heard shooting. Then they became louder and for on an hour it went on - bursts of fire from all sides but also sounds like bombs going off.
'The walls were shaking it was horrific. It was like war. It was Beirut.'
Now the director is thinking of quitting Paris.
'Something like this doesn't surprise me,' she told Le Parisien, 'that terrorists have hidden here. In this district the cellars are full of weapons. Outside there is a dealer every 100mtrs. It's common knowledge around here that people go and come back from Syria with ease. The past year the atmosphere has been awful in the street...it's very hard.'
Since the school was established in 1996 in the centre of Saint-Denis, the area has deteriorated added Caroline.
'At first there was a real mix here, but in recent years people have just been leaving and the handful of young couples who arrive are horrified. After this morning I think we'll have to leave. I don't know if anyone will even come in to work today', she said.
BFMTV and iTele both showed amateur video of the shootings and cited witnesses in the area saying they had heard sporadic gunfire since around 4.30am.
Omar Dati, a 17-year-old student who lives in the area, said: 'Everybody could hear the shooting very early on. It was like a warzone – the soldiers were dressed in battle gear.
'The explosions were very loud indeed and we were all terrified we would be shot. We didn't know where to run.'
Shock: A police official says there have been exchanges of gunfire and special SWAT teams are on the scene, which has been blocked off by dozens of police cars and vans
Guard: An armed police officer stands outside the apartment block as the siege continues in Saint Denis
Raid: French media reports the raid is part of an ongoing operation to catch the ninth suspect involved in Friday night's terror attacks in the French capital, who is thought to be on the run
Sick taunts of the Paris mastermind: Abdelhamid Abaaoud boasted of freely crossing Europe's borders to plot atrocities – even after being arrested and with 'my name and picture all over the news'
The mastermind of the Paris massacres previously bragged about travelling across Europe at will to plot atrocities – even after being arrested.
Belgian extremist Abdelhamid Abaaoud is one of the top recruiters for ISIS now among the world's most wanted war criminals after orchestrating the Paris attacks that killed 129 people.
Despite being on wanted lists, he has shuttled between Syria and Europe, exploiting the migrant crisis on EU borders.
The 27-year-old has been able to plan two atrocities and brainwash hundreds of young men to join Islamic State, including his 13-year-old brother.
Kingpin: Abaaoud fled Belgium for Syria and has become an ISIS executioner, recruiter and trainer and one of the world's most wanted men
Sick: Bodies of Abaaoud's victims in Syria are pictured tied to the extremist's truck, seconds before he drives away and drags them along
Abaaoud was also seen driving a pick-up truck with a mound of bloody corpses in tow. One of his accomplices sits perched on the back, while another can be heard complaining about the smell.
He told an ISIS propaganda magazine he was arrested in Europe in January preparing a mission to kill civilians and behead policemen. Incredibly, he claims he was not detained.
'My name and picture were all over the news yet I was able to stay in their homeland, plan operations against them and leave safely when doing so became necessary,' he said.
His earlier plot – in January in the eastern Belgian city of Verviers – was thwarted when police raided the terrorists' hideout, killing two suspects.
Abaaoud was not found and is thought to have been in Turkey or Greece directing the pair by phone.
Police found four Kalashnikovs, four handguns, ammunition and explosives during the raid as well as a police radio and uniforms.
Two days later, officials in Athens announced they had captured Abaaoud but he had given them the slip.
Describing his return to Belgium for the beheading plot, he said he and his fellow fanatics faced a number of trials but 'were able to obtain weapons and set up a safe house while we planned to carry out operations'.
He added: 'After the raid on the safe house, they figured out that I had been with the brothers and that we had been planning operations together.
'So they gathered intelligence agents from all over the world – from Europe and America – in order to detain me. I was able to leave and come to Syria despite being chased after by so many intelligence agencies.
All this proves that a Muslim should not fear the bloated image of the crusader intelligence.'
Abaaoud is pictured left in a still from the video, while a fellow ISIS extremist is seen right. The pair are seen in the depraved video footage
Abaaoud, who has regularly posed with bodies he decapitated and was seen in Greece in January but evaded arrest, was also linked to the thwarted high speed train attack earlier this year and church attacks around Paris. He is pictured dragging the bodies of victims in Syria
The brothers he recruited – Brahim and Salah Abdeslam – took part in the cafe and restaurant attacks on Friday night.
Brahim, 31, blew himself up in the Comptoir Voltaire bar while Salah, 26, is the subject of an international manhunt. He was stopped by police on the Belgian border but not detained.
The fanatics grew up in the now notorious Molenbeek district of Brussels, a hotbed of radical Islam.
Abaaoud's father Omar ran a clothes shop just a few doors down from the Abdeslam family home in the main square in Molenbeek.
Benollal Mohamet, who runs a pharmacy there, said: 'He would have known the Abdeslam brothers, they were the same age, they lived near each other – it was inevitable that their paths would have crossed. I would never have predicted this.'
Abaaoud attended one of Brussels' most prestigious schools – Collège Saint-Pierre – but he fell into trouble with the law and was jailed for theft. It is claimed he was then radicalised in Saint Gilles prison in southern Brussels and went to Syria to join IS.
In August he was linked to the terrorist behind a failed attack on a high-speed train from Brussels to Paris.
His father had reported him to police after his youngest son, 13-year-old Younes, went missing last year.
In an interview in January he told of his shame, saying his son had ruined his family. 'Why in God's name would he want to kill innocent Belgians? Our family owes everything to this country,' he added.
In July, Abaaoud was sentenced in absentia to 20 years in prison for recruiting ISIS fighters to Syria. Many of the 32 people charged with him remain at large.
Belgian authorities refused to comment on Abaaoud's whereabouts last night – he is believed to be in Syria – or his claim that he had been stopped by police and let go.
Abdelhamid Abaaoud, one of the world's most wanted war criminals, is pictured taking aim with a rifle in a photo taken earlier this year
In a video released last year he said: 'All my life, I have seen the blood of Muslims flow. Pray that Allah will break the backs of those who oppose him, his soldiers and his admirers, and that he will exterminate them.'
Another video shows him loading a pick-up truck and a makeshift trailer with a mound of bloodied corpses.
Trying to recruit others, he says: 'Are you satisfied with the life you lead, a humiliating life, whether you are in Europe, in Africa, in Arab countries or in America? Are you satisfied with this life, with this life of humiliation? Is there anything better than jihad or a martyr?'
It was claimed that Abaaoud and Salah Abdeslam once carried out a robbery together. Belgian broadcaster RTL said Salah had spent time in prison in Belgium for 'hold-ups' and the name of Abaaoud figured in the court and police documents relating to the case.
According to the De Standaard newspaper, Abaaoud is also mentioned in files relating to Brahim Abdeslam for alleged crimes carried out in Brussels in 2010 and 2011.
Abaaoud even featured in an online ISIS terror magazine Dabiq featuring his life as a Jihadi.
According to the interview, he traveled to Syria 'to terrorise the crusaders waging war against the Muslims'.
He said: 'Belgium is a member of the crusader coalition attacking the Muslims of Iraq and Sham (Syria).
Abaaoud claimed that in the past he returned to Belgium to set up a safe house to plan further raids across Europe.
He said his plot failed: 'The kuffar raided the pace with more than 150 soldiers from both French and Belgian special forces units.' He said both of his men were killed in the shootout.
He claimed it was after this, he returned to Syria due to the attentions of European security agencies.
French police have said Abaaoud planned the attack from his base in Syria with help in Belgium and France.
Abaaoud, who has regularly posed with bodies he decapitated and was seen in Greece in January but evaded arrest, was also linked to the thwarted high speed train attack earlier this year and church attacks around Paris.