On Friday, instead of up with the usual post-Bastille Day hangover, the Riviera city has instead opened its eyes to be greeted by shock and mourning.
The Promenade des Anglais would usually be filled with locals and holidaymakers on a warm July day; today it has been cordoned off by police as officers remove bodies from the scene, and luxurious hotels have become makeshift hospitals. Flags are flying at half-mast.
A Swedish citizen on holiday in Nice, Kristian Julius, told The Local: “Today everything is quiet. There’s hardly a soul on the beach. The shock is starting to wear off – we’re just trying to carry on as normal.”
Kristian Julius witnessed the attack. Photo: Private
Julius ran to the beach to escape the truck last night after seeing it veering into the crowd, and remembers scenes of panic breaking out there. “We saw two people who had been killed, and an old woman whose leg was torn off at the knee. It was the old people and children who couldn’t get away quickly enough who were hurt – it’s so cowardly,” he said.
On Friday there were reports of holidaymakers just packing up and heading to the airport or looking for any other way to get out of the city.
The city’s mayor, Philippe Pradal, said that Nice was “in a state of infinite sadness”, speaking on RTL radio on Friday morning. “The city has never been hit so hard.”
Forensics experts evacuate a body from the Promenade des Anglais. Photo: AFP
For Pradal, the fact that the driver chose to attack the “iconic” Promenade des Anglais was symbolic. “The Promenade des Anglais is one of the major elements of prestige in the city,” he said.
The local paper, Nice Matin, ran the headline ‘Carnage in Nice’ above a picture of the scene, and devoted nine pages of Friday’s edition to the events of Thursday night. One of the paper’s reporters, Damien Allemand, had been at the fireworks display and gave a horrifying testimony of “bodies flying like bowling pins”.
Police are guarding the Promenade while bodies are removed, and forensics experts and police officers are examining the white truck which was used in the attack. While some locals and tourists are watching the emergency services at work, others walk straight past, heading to the beach.
Photo: AFPThe grand, 5-star Hotel Negresco has had its lobby transformed into a first-aid point. Richard Werly, correspondent for Swiss newspaper Le Temps, said the lobby was packed with “hundreds of people in shock.”
As well as the dead hundreds of others were left injured by the 19-tonne truck, with 18 currently in intensive care.
The Centre Universitaire Méditerranéen, a conference centre which is part of the city’s university, is being used as a meeting point for families of the victims and injured, with police protection. Anti-terrorist officers have opened an investigation into mass murder.
Upcoming cultural events in the resort town have been cancelled, including a jazz concert and a show by Rihanna.
Source:The local Fr