ISIL released a video Sunday purporting to show nine militants involved in the November Paris attacks that killed 130 people, in which they threaten "coalition" countries including Britain.
The Takfiri group, ISIL (so-called Islamic State in Iraq and Levant) released a video Sunday purporting to show nine militants involved in the November Paris attacks that killed 130 people, in which they threaten "coalition" countries including Britain.
The video posted on Takfiri websites is entitled "Kill wherever you find them", and shows four Belgians, three French citizens and two Iraqis said to be responsible for the attacks.
It also depicts the nine carrying out atrocities before the rampage in Paris, including beheading and shooting people described as hostages.
In the video the insurgents, speaking in French and in Arabic, say their "message is addressed to all the countries taking part in the (US-led) coalition" that has been fighting ISIL in Syria and Iraq since September 2014.
The footage also shows a picture of British Prime Minister David Cameron accompanied by the words in English: "Whoever stands in the ranks of kufr (unbelievers) will be a target for our swords."
The video, produced by ISIL's Al-Hayat Media Centre, describes the attackers as "lions" who "brought France to its knees".
The footage shows images of the Paris strike claimed by ISIL as well as security operations by French special forces during the onslaught.
It was not clear why the group released the video more than two months after the November 13 bloodshed in which Takfiris armed with guns and suicide belts launched coordinated attacks on Paris bars, restaurants, and a concert hall.
Seven of them died during the attacks and two in a subsequent police raid but the total number of those directly involved is still unclear.
Among the men purportedly shown in the video is suspected ringleader Abdelhamid Abaaoud, identified by his nom de guerre Abu Umar al-Baljiki, or Abu Umar the Belgian.
Abaaoud, who was widely thought to have been in Syria fighting with ISIL insurgents in the past, was killed in a shootout with French police days after the bloodiest attacks to hit Europe since the Madrid train bombings in 2004.
French President Francois Hollande has said that the Paris attacks were planned in Syria but prepared and organized in Belgium.
Belgian authorities have formally charged 10 people in the case, including a number from the troubled Brussels neighborhood of Molenbeek where a number of extremists have stayed over the last two decades.
Four suspects remain at large, including Salah Abdeslam who allegedly drove suicide bombers to the French national stadium outside Paris, as well as Mohamed Abrini, suspected of having helped scout out the attack sites. Both are from Molenbeek.