Hundreds arrested as third night of riots rocks France after Nahel's death (2024)

  • France
  • Fatal police shooting in Nanterre

At least 677 people were arrested and 249 police were injured overnight in riots across the country following the police killing of a teenager in Nanterre on Tuesday.

Le Monde with AFP

Published on June 30, 2023, at 4:41 am (Paris), updated on June 30, 2023, at 12:29 pm

3 min read

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Hundreds arrested as third night of riots rocks France after Nahel's death (1)

Protests over the fatal police shooting of a teenager rocked France for a third straight night on Thursday, June 29, with cars burned, buildings vandalised and hundreds arrested in cities across the country.

The nighttime unrest followed a march earlier on Thursday in memory of the 17-year-old, named Nahel, whose death has revived longstanding grievances about policing and racial profiling in France's low-income and multiethnic suburbs.

Read more Subscribers only Hour by hour: From a deadly traffic stop to the march in memory of Nahel M.

The Elysée announced early on Friday that President Emmanuel Macron would cut short a trip to Brussels, where he was attending a European Union summit, to chair a crisis meeting on the violence – the second such sit-down in as many days.

An internal security note indicated authorities were expecting a "theatre of urban violence", with around 40,000 police and gendarmes – along with elite Raid and GIGN units – deployed in several cities.

At least three cities around Paris had issued curfews, while bans on public gatherings were initiated and helicopters and drones mobilised in the neighbouring cities of Lille and Tourcoing in the country's north.

Read more Nahel's death in Nanterre as seen by the foreign press

Despite the massive security deployment, violence and damage were reported in multiple areas. Security forces overnight arrested 667 people confirmed the Interior Minister on Friday morning. "Last night, our police, gendarmes and firefighters again courageously confronted rare violence. In line with my firm instructions, they made 667 arrests," Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin wrote on Twitter on Friday morning. 249 police were injured.

Police sources said that rather than pitched battles between protesters and police, the night was marked by pillaging of shops, reportedly including flagship branches of Nike and Zara in Paris.

Public buildings were also targeted, with a police station in the Pyrenees city of Pau hit with a Molotov co*cktail, according to regional authorities, and an elementary school and a district office set on fire in Lille.

Macron under pressure

France has been rocked by successive nights of protests since Nahel was shot point-blank on Tuesday during a traffic stop captured on video.

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In her first media interview since the shooting, Nahel's mother, Mounia, told the France 5 TV channel: "I don't blame the police, I blame one person: the one who took the life of my son." She said the 38-year-old officer responsible, who was detained and charged with voluntary manslaughter on Thursday, "saw an Arab face, a little kid, and wanted to take his life".

The memorial march for Nahel, led by Mounia, ended with riot police firing tear gas as several cars were set alight in the western Paris suburb of Nanterre, where the teenager lived and was killed.

Read more Subscribers only Anger and tension as marchers grieve teenager killed by police

As part of measures to restore calm, Paris bus and tram services were halted after 9 pm on Thursday, the region's president said. But the measures and heightened security appeared to do little to deter unrest Thursday night.

In the city centre of Marseille, a library was vandalised, according to local officials, and scuffles broke out nearby when police used tear gas to disperse a group of 100 to 150 people who allegedly tried to set up barricades. Multiple public buildings were also targeted in Seine-Saint-Denis, in the Paris metro area, according to a police source.

In the suburb of Drancy, rioters used a truck to force open the entrance to a shopping centre, which was then partly looted and burned, a police source said.

Firefighters in the northern municipality of Roubaix, meanwhile, dashed from blaze to blaze throughout the night, with a hotel near the train station also catching fire, sending its dozen or so residents fleeing into the streets.

In Nanterre, the epicentre of the unrest, tensions rose around midnight, with fireworks and explosives set off in the Pablo Picasso district, where Nahel had lived.

Hundreds arrested as third night of riots rocks France after Nahel's death (2)

The government is desperate to avoid a repeat of 2005 urban riots, sparked by the death of two boys of African origin in a police chase, during which 6,000 people were arrested.

Read more In 2005, three weeks of rioting shook France after the deaths of two teenagers

Macron has called for calm and said the protest violence was "unjustifiable". The riots are a fresh challenge for the president, who had been looking to move past some of the biggest demonstrations in a generation sparked by a controversial rise in the retirement age.

'Bullet in the head'

Nahel was killed as he pulled away from police who were trying to stop him for a traffic infraction. An authenticated video showed two police officers standing by the side of the stationary car, with one pointing a weapon at the driver. A voice is heard saying: "You are going to get a bullet in the head." The police officer then appears to fire as the car slowly drives off.

Clashes first erupted as the video emerged, contradicting police accounts that the teenager was driving at the officer.

The officer's lawyer, Laurent-Franck Lienard, told BFMTV late Thursday that his client had apologised as he was taken into custody. "The first words he pronounced were to say sorry, and the last words he said were to say sorry to the family," Lienard said.

Earlier on Thursday, Nanterre public prosecutor Pascal Prache had said: "The prosecution considers that the legal conditions for the use of the weapon" by the police officer who fired the shot "are not met".

Le Monde with AFP

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Hundreds arrested as third night of riots rocks France after Nahel's death (2024)
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