A French journalist held hostage by Islamic State extremists says the intensification of airstrikes in Syria risks pushing people into the hands of the Islamist extremists.
La Bonne Biere, a corner cafe 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.
In surveillance video seen by The Associated Press, two gunmen in black calmly approached La Bonne Biere that night, firing deliberately on the outdoor tables before turning back toward a car that can be seen rolling slowly behind them.
Posted Friday on the government's website, the guide has three-step instructions informing citizens they should "escape, hide, alert" in the face of danger.
A new project allows Spaniards to anonymously tip off authorities about suspected radicals, part of efforts to step up the country's campaign against Islamic extremists.
The Interior Ministry said Friday that Spaniards can now contact the Intelligence Center for Terrorism and Organized Crime through a website, a mobile app or a free telephone hotline, which will be monitored 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
Spain's internal security chief Jorge Fernandez Diaz also told his EU counterparts in Brussels that the government is also mounting a campaign to discredit the propaganda issued by the social media-savvy Islamic State group.
Europe's worst attack by Islamic militants occurred in Spain in 2004, when bombs on Madrid commuter trains killed 191 people.
Germany's Parliament has approved plans to provide military assistance in the fight against Islamic State militants, including reconnaissance jets and up to 1,200 support personnel.
Germany plans to send up to six Tornado reconnaissance planes and tanker aircraft, as well as a frigate to help protect the French aircraft carrier Ch