Anonymous wants to make sure militant Islamist propaganda video, like this being filmed in Syria, doesn’t make it online.
Reuters/Stringer
ISIS uses the internet, especially social media, to propagandize and recruit. Members of hacker group Anonymous have turned their sights on these accounts.
Children light candles near the site of the attack at the Bataclan concert hall in Paris.
Christian Hartmann/Reuters
After November 13, teachers in France asked themselves how they could talk to their students about the violence. The answers are both creative and deeply moving.
Sydney Opera House is illuminated in the colours of the French flag in a display of solidarity after the attacks on Paris.
AAP/Dan Himbrechts
Islamic State terrorism and propaganda are designed to provoke often predictable responses. We naturally respond with displays of outrage and solidarity, but we should beware the trap of division.
The response must be resolute, but it must be rational.
Yves Herman/Reuters
Less is often more – acting quickly in the wake of atrocities rarely leads to good laws.
An image of a man described as Abdelhamid Abaaoud, suspected of being behind the Paris attacks, was published in the Islamic State’s social media website.
Reuters
The tools that protect people’s privacy on social media are being used by terrorists to spread their messages of hate and attack.
Reuters/Paul Hackett
Increased resources and staffing is a start but security must be properly targeted and accountable to the British people.
Cristian Roberti
The sad truth is that it’s all too easy to get hold of automatic weapons in Europe.
The aftermath in Beirut.
Reuters/Khalil Hassan
Lebanon has been coming apart at the seams for years – Islamic State is trying to make it disintegrate entirely.
Still standing.
Reuters/Thaier Al-Sudani
Islamic State is as resilient and effective as any terrorist group we’ve seen. How has it made itself so strong?
There has been a global outpouring of grief and support for Parisians after the terror attacks in the city.
EPA/Raminder Pal Singh
In the next few weeks we may see a resurgence of rhetoric calling for more resources to fight the War on Terror following the Paris attacks. Islamophobia may take deeper root in Europe as a whole.
Paris’ famed Notre Dame Cathedral was in lockdown after terrorist attacks across the city killed more than 100 people.
EPA/Ian Langsdon
Islam, like Christianity, has a capacity for violence and a capacity for peace, and neither is in essence peaceful or violent.
Reuters/Pascal Rossignol
Opponents to migration have been waiting for an opportunity to close borders. But that won’t stop disillusioned people turning against their countries.
US Secretary of State John Kerry (L) and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov after an international conference on Syria, in Vienna, from which Australia was excluded.
EPA/Hans Punz
Australia – despite its major military commitment fighting Islamic State – was excluded from the Vienna weekend talks seeking a peace path for Syria because of an objection by Russia.
The morning after November 13.
Reuters/Yves Herman
Terrorists have attacked leaders and civilians in France many times before, and for a dizzying array of reasons.
The Paris attacks were a ghastly media spectacular. What will be the broader historical significance in Europe and further afield?
French police stand guard outside the national soccer stadium
Benoit Tessier/Reuters
Under pressure in the Middle East, ISIS is turning to terrorism in Europe with a new set of predictable goals.
Dark days.
Reuters/Gonzalo Fuentes
IS claims responsibility for series of assaults. President Hollande says it is an ‘act of war’.
Reuters/Patrick Fallon
The British government’s position is that this was a legitimate act of self-defence in a war zone. But there are other issues to examine.
The man thought to be Mohammed Emwazi.
Reuters
US and UK claim the man who bragged about decapitating western hostages has probably been killed in an airstrike.
The government’s new national security bill proposes to expand the secrecy provisions available to courts in control order proceedings.
AAP/Lukas Coch
The bill does not adequately balance the right of someone subjected to a control order to a fair trial and to know the case against them.