Nice attack: At least 84 killed by lorry at Bastille Day celebrations Published duration 15 July 2016

media caption Nice attack: Footage of final gun battle

At least 84 people have been killed, including more than 10 children, after a lorry slammed through a crowd celebrating Bastille Day in the southern French city of Nice.

The driver ploughed on for 2km (1.2 miles) on the Promenade des Anglais at about 23:00 local time on Thursday, before being shot dead by police.

Witnesses say the lorry swerved in an apparent attempt to hit more people.

Guns and a grenade found inside the lorry were reported to be fakes.

President Francois Hollande, who is in Nice, said the attack was of "an undeniable terrorist nature".

He said the battle against terrorism would be long as France faced "an enemy who will continue to hit countries who see liberty as their essential value".

A state of emergency, in place since November's Paris attacks carried out by militants from the so-called Islamic State group, in which 130 people died, has been extended by three months.

Warning: This story contains images some people may find distressing

The attack in Nice began shortly after the end of a firework display on the seafront for Bastille Day, which is the country's national holiday.

image copyright AFP image caption The waterfront was packed with families viewing the fireworks display

What witnesses saw

"I heard lots of screams and everybody was running in different directions. I didn't know what was going on, it felt surreal and I didn't move but thought it must be some kind of practical joke.

"Then I saw the truck coming straight at me swerving all over the place. It was perhaps 50 yards away. After that there was no conscious thought, my body took over, time slowed down and I ran and thank God I got out of the way," said Pouya, from Toronto.

image copyright Reuters image caption A doll is seen on the ground next to one of the victims

media caption Witness Colin Srivastava: "Police said: Run, now"

Nader el-Shafei told the BBC he saw the driver face-to-face for about a minute: "He was very nervous… looking for something around him, I kept yelling at him and waving my hands to stop... he picked up his gun and started to shoot police."

Afterwards he said he ran towards the beach with others, fearing the driver, who was then shot by police, would detonate the lorry.

Read more: Witnesses describe terror

Who were the victims?

Tourists and residents of Nice were among those who died. Two American citizens, a Ukrainian, a Russian and a Swiss woman are among the 84 victims.

Mr Hollande said 50 injured people were in a critical condition "between life and death". Many of the victims were foreigners, he said.

Fondation Lenval, the children's hospital in Nice, says it has treated some 50 children and adolescents, including two who died during or after surgery.

Some 30,000 people were on the Promenade des Anglais at the time of the attack, officials said.

Analysis by BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner

image copyright AFP image caption The lorry appears to have bullet holes on the windscreen

This is not the first time in recent years that someone has deliberately driven a truck into pedestrians on a French street. But the scale, speed and death toll from this apparent attack are unprecedented.

It follows an earlier call by so-called Islamic State (IS) spokesman Abu Muhammad al-Adnani for IS followers to do exactly what this truck driver did. This, and other calls for attacks in Europe, are partly in response to the significant losses being experienced by IS to the shrinking territory it controls in Syria and Iraq.

US-led airstrikes, including by French warplanes, are taking a particularly heavy toll there. At home, France has become the number one target of opportunity for IS and its supporters, unperturbed by the national state of emergency that has just been extended.

What we know about the attacker

media caption Will Shore, eyewitness: "You could see the fear in people's faces"

No group has so far said it was behind the attack.

The identity papers of a 31-year-old French-Tunisian were found in the lorry, which was reportedly rented out two days earlier in the suburb of Saint-Laurent-du-Var.

The man has been named by local media as Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel, although not by police.

Tunisian security sources said he was married with three children and came from the Tunisian town of Msaken. He visited Tunisia frequently, the last time eight months ago.

He reportedly lived on the Route de Turin in Nice and had been in trouble with the police in the past for petty crime, but he was not on the watch list of radicalised young men.

Residents of his apartment building said he was a loner who did not respond when they said hello.

Response and reaction

media caption Francois Hollande: "Horror has come down on France once again"

Mr Hollande praised security forces and medical personnel, adding: "We will overcome suffering because we are a united France." He said earlier that "operational reserves" would be deployed to support the army and security forces across the country, with particular focus on the borders

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls has declared three days of national mourning, starting from Saturday

image caption Social media video showed people fleeing after the incident

US President Barack Obama condemned "in the strongest terms" what he said appeared to be "a horrific terrorist attack in Nice"

UK Prime Minister Theresa May said she was "shocked and saddened by the horrifying attack in Nice"

Nice's jazz festival has been cancelled and Marseille has announced it is cancelling a fireworks show planned for Friday evening

The hashtag #PrayForNice is trending worldwide and in France #NousSommesUnis (we are united) is also trending

Timeline of terror: France's deadliest Islamist attacks

image copyright AP image caption The attacks on a concert hall, restaurants and the Stade de France in Paris on 13 November left many dead