reporter: politically, northern ireland is relatively stable. the violence that plagued the country for years was brought to an end by the good friday agreement. but for the victims and their families, it is still a deeply divided society, where many catholics and protestants never mix. some people from the region worry that if brexit britain s decision to leave the e.u. goes ahead, it could undermine the peace accord. such as victims rights campaigner, raymond mccord, who fears that without ties to the eu, the justice he seeks will remain elusive. and it s personal for him too. his son was killed by a loyalist paramilitary group. reporter: his son, raymond jr. was just 22-years-old when he was killed by the paramilitary group the ulster volunteer force. it s now been 19 years since raymond mccord buried his eldest son at this graveyard in northern belfast. raymond mccord: i never heard of him being in trouble. he went out, when he came home he was always laughing and smi
bound and then next a restaurant and data. it is a vicious series of attacks here it up by militants on the so-called islamic state. the attacks had a personal impact and weighed close to home literally. she lives with her family in the neighborhood where one of the attacks took place, so she knows the people in places where it was hit and she has been not talking to friends and neighbors to find out how local people and she herself can cope after a trauma. [sirens] she and her neighbors a new day dawns in paris, the home of dw correspondent susanna dorhage. she and her neighbors spent the night barricaded in their homes in the city s 11th arrondisment while the police searched their street for the perpetrators. now, the day after the deadly attacks, she s able to view the aftermath at a local restaurant la bonne biere. 10 people were shot dead here just hours earlier. susanna: we were just a few buildings away, but we could easily have been sitting here. the pavement her
bound and then next a restaurant and data. it is a vicious series of attacks here it up by militants on the so-called islamic state. the attacks had a personal impact and weighed close to home literally. she lives with her family in the neighborhood where one of the attacks took place, so she knows the people in places where it was hit and she has been not talking to friends and neighbors to find out how local people and she herself can cope after a trauma. [sirens] she and her neighbors a new day dawns in paris, the home of dw correspondent susanna dorhage. she and her neighbors spent the night barricaded in their homes in the city s 11th arrondisment while the police searched their street for the perpetrators. now, the day after the deadly attacks, she s able to view the aftermath at a local restaurant la bonne biere. 10 people were shot dead here just hours earlier. susanna: we were just a few buildings away, but we could easily have been sitting here. the pavement her
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If you were to believe the cinematic depictions of Paris, everyone in the city lives in a huge apartment near the Eiffel Tower, the entire city is made up of Haussmann buildings and clean streets and every single person is smoulderingly sexy.