'France is at war' and will destroy DAESH says Hollande after Paris attacks
French President Francois Hollande delivers a speech to members of Parliament during an exceptional joint gathering of Parliament in Versailles on November 16, 2015. (AFP Photo)


French President Francois Hollande vowed to destroy DAESH on Monday after its atrocities in Paris, promising tough new anti-terror measures at home and intensified bombing of Syria.France and Belgium staged dozens of raids on suspected extremists as the manhunt continued for the eighth, including in a known radical hotspot in Brussels where some of the attackers are thought to have lived.Describing the coordinated attacks that killed 129 people as "acts of war," Hollande urged a global fightback to crush Daesh and said he would hold talks with his U.S. and Russian counterparts on a new offensive.Friday's "acts of war... were decided and planned in Syria, prepared and organised in Belgium (and) perpetrated on our soil with French complicity," Hollande told an extraordinary meeting of both houses of parliament in Versailles."The need to destroy Daesh ... concerns the entire international community," he told lawmakers, who burst into an emotional rendition of the La Marseillaise national anthem after his speech -- only the second time in more than 150 years a French president has addressed a joint session of parliament.On the domestic front, Hollande called for an extension of the state of emergency by three months and announced 8,500 new police and judicial jobs to help counter terrorism.A government source told AFP that those returning from Syria could be placed under house arrest and said the presidency was considering amending the constitution to allow for tougher security measures. Investigators identified two more extremists involved in the assault, including a Frenchman previously charged with planning a terror attack and a suicide bomber found with a Syrian passport, which has yet to be authenticated. Late on Sunday, French planes bombed the stronghold of DAESH in northern Syria.French jets hit a DAESH command post, a recruitment centre, a munitions depot and a training camp in Raqa, the extremists' de facto Syrian capital, and more raids were reported Monday.The manhunt continued for 26-year-old Salah Abdeslam, one of three brothers linked to the attacks. One brother blew himself up in the Bataclan concert venue and was identified from a severed finger, while the third was arrested in Belgium but released without charge.Abdelhamid Abaaoud, 28, a Belgian of Moroccan descent also from Molenbeek and thought to be fighting for DAESH in Syria, is considered a possible mastermind of the attacks. Five of seven known attackers have been identified, but it is unclear if other gunmen fled after the carnage.Two of the gunmen behind the bloodbath at the Bataclan, where 89 people were killed, have been identified as 29-year-old Paris native Omar Ismail Mostefai and 28-year-old Samy Amimour. Both detonated suicide bombs.A Turkish official said its police had twice warned France about Mostefai, who was one of 10,000 people tagged by French intelligence as an extremist.Amimour was charged in France in 2012 for "conspiracy to commit terrorism" over an attempt to travel to Yemen and was wanted on a global arrest warrant after violating the terms of his judicial supervision. There are fears some of the assailants entered Europe as part of the huge influx of people fleeing Syria's civil war, after a Syrian passport was found near the body of one suicide bomber at the Stade de France in the name of Ahmad Al Mohammad.The document has yet to be verified and Serbia detained a migrant on Monday whose passport contained the same data.The attacks came less than 11 months after radicals struck the Paris offices of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo and a Jewish supermarket, killing 17.