Hello and welcome to NewsHour from the BBC World Service.
For coming to you live from London, I'm Krupa Bhatti.
Coming up later on the programme,
we'll hear more of that breaking news of that formal apology from the BBC to Donald Trump for a TV programme broadcast last year which contained a misleading edit of one of his speeches.
But we begin this hour tonight in Paris.
The bells of Notre Dame Cathedral rang out tonight to mark the 10th anniversary of the worst attack on French soil
since World War II.
Those attacks in Paris killed 132 people and left over 400 wounded,
an evening of horror that has left a lasting mark on the French capital.
Shortly before we came on air,
President Macron spoke at a solemn ceremony commemorating a decade since the attacks,
and he emphasized the strength of the nation.
Paris held strong.
You held strong.
France held strong.
The Republic held strong.
In a crisis with brotherhood, with justice, with truth, with the love of life, we held strong.
In what was a coordinated attack in 2015,
suicide bombers detonated themselves outside the French National Stadium,
Le Stade de France, where the men's football team were playing Germany.