-
France set to pass emergency ‘budget law’: is it good or bad for your finances?
The country will effectively be without a budget from 2025, with knock-on effects for individuals and companies
-
EasyJet announces nine new flight routes from France including to UK
A service from Bordeaux to Birmingham is among the new announcements
-
French weekend weather outlook December 14 - 15: gloomy and chilly in the north
Cloudy skies are expected to dominate in the north, but in the south temperatures will still reach double figures
French police reject new ‘anti-racism’ announcement
Police officers across France have “downed tools” - by placing their handcuffs on the ground - in protest at the interior minister’s new measures to “improve ethics” and anti-racism within the police.
The call for unity came from police union Unité SGP Police. Police officers in Paris, Toulouse, Nice, Grenoble and elsewhere took part in the protest last night (Thursday June 11).
(Photo: France 3 Côte d'Azur / @F3cotedazur / Twitter)
It came after interior minister Christophe Castaner this week announced a series of new measures designed to tackle racism and alleged discrimination by the police.
He called for a “zero tolerance” approach, and the suspension of any police officer suspected of racism. He also announced that the controversial “chokehold arrest” method - which involves leaning on a suspect’s neck - will no longer be taught at police academies in France, and would be banned.
He said that police officers would be required to use body cameras more, receive ID training, and that the country’s major police bodies would be “reformed” to enable them to work together more “transparently”.
Mr Castaner said “each transgression, each excess, each word, including racist expressions” would be “the object of an inquiry, a decision, a sanction”.
The measures were announced as protests continue around the world - including in France - against police violence and institutional racism, sparked by the killing of an unarmed black man, George Floyd, in the US by a white police officer in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The officer, Derek Chauvin, has since been charged with second- and third-degree murder.
Protesters in France have also called for justice for Adama Traoré, a young black man who died in police custody in 2016.
In response, President Emmanuel Macron requested that Mr Castaner act.
Read more: New anti-racism measures for French police
Read more: Sanctions promised for French police racism
Police symbolic action
But police in France have reacted angrily to Mr Castaner’s announcements, seeing them as a general accusation of racism and violence.
Union general secretary Yves Lefebvre said: “Police in France no longer consider Christophe Castaner as the supposed “first police officer” in France. He left us behind on Monday, he put us out to pasture on Monday. It’s now up to him to re-climb the Everest of trust.”
The union called on officers to “not arrest, not intervene” on Thursday June 11, and to “gather in front of their police stations at 18h, and place their handcuffs symbolically on the ground”.
Bravo monsieur @CCastaner , vous avez réussi à décourager notre #Police. Les personnes qui assurent ma sécurité et celle de ma famille. Il est temps de vous retirer
— Christophe .C (@ccharlot31) June 11, 2020
Des policiers déposent leurs menottes dans plusieurs villes françaises https://t.co/m0OgmcoV0p via @Le_Figaro pic.twitter.com/O7gHyZzrEK
Refutations
Around 60 police also signed their names this week in an open letter published in weekly newspaper Marianne. They wrote: “We will not allow our brothers in arms to be treated as though we are racist...we refute the statement that ‘the police is racist’.
Fabien Vanhemelryck, general secretary of another union, Alliance Police, also criticised Mr Castaner’s comments, and said: “An interior minister must be behind his police officers.”
Police director general Frédéric Veaux, and police prefect of Paris, Didier Lallement, have each written to their respective officers, to signal their support.
Mr Veaux wrote: “Faced with confusion from a minority, I share with you a feeling of profound injustice.” The director general had already written of the “disgust” and “feeling of abandonment” felt by police after Mr Castaner’s comments.
Mr Lallement said: “In this very strange time when the challenges to our actions are permanent and becoming more and more aggressive, I want to tell you that there is no doubt [in your abilities].”
Mr Castaner is set to meet senior officers and police commissioners to discuss the measures today (Friday June 12).
Related stories
Thousands protest racism in France despite Covid-19
20,000 protest police violence in France