More than 100 people have been killed in a series of attacks in Paris that have prompted the French president to close the country's borders and declare a state of emergency.

(Miguel Medina/AFP/Getty)

François Hollande, flanked by prominent officials, addresses reporters near the Bataclan concert hall in central Paris, where police are reporting that about 100 hostages are dead, including two attackers, following a hostage situation.

(Christian Hartmann/Reuters)

Heavily armed police raid the Bataclan concert hall. The venue was one of several hit by gunmen and bombers in Paris on Friday evening. Dozens of people were killed in what a shaken French president described as an unprecedented attack.

(Jacques Brinon/AP)

Police officers and rescue workers gather around victims of the Paris attacks outside a restaurant in the 10th arrondissement — one of at least six separate locations where attacks were reported around the French capital.

(Thibault Camus/Associated Press)

A French police officer on the lookout for shooters in front of restaurant Le Petit Cambodge.

(Etienne Laurent/EPA)

(Dominique Faget/AFP/Getty)

(Kenzo Tribouillard/AFP/Getty)

Fire brigade members remove a man from the Bataclan concert hall, near the Marais neighbourhood, in central Paris.

(Christian Hartmann/Reuters)

Reporters take cover near the Bataclan concert hall.

(Dominique Faget/AFP/Getty)

Police officers stand guard outside an emergency meeting at the Élysée Palace, the official residence of the president.

(Jacques Demarthon/AFP/Getty)

A couple take comfort on the pitch of the Stade de France after hundreds of people spilled onto the field following a pair of blasts.

(Christophe Ena/AP)

(Christophe Ena/EPA) (Christophe Ena/EPA)

People stream out of the Stade de France, in Saint Denis, just outside Paris, after a friendly soccer match between France and Germany.

(Michel Euler/Associated Press)

Earlier in the day, police evacuate the Molitor Hotel, where the German soccer team is staying, ahead of Friday's match.