Cape Argus

€1m pledged for Paris cop

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A COLLECTION for a French policeman who sparked nationwide riots by shooting a teenager dead topped €1 million (over R20m) yesterday, dwarfing donations to the victim’s family.

More than 40 000 people have pledged money to the online appeal set up by a far-right media commentato­r on the Gofundme.com website.

It easily outstrippe­d the €200 000 gathered for the family of the dead 17-year-old, Nahel, of north African origin.

Nahel’s grandmothe­r said she was “heartbroke­n” by the support shown for the policeman.

“He took the life of my grandson. This man must pay, the same as everyone,” she told the BFM channel on Sunday. “I have confidence in the justice system. I believe in justice.”

Last Tuesday’s shooting during a traffic stop in a suburb west of Paris has exposed deep political divisions in France. Many right-wing figures have defended the security forces, while those on the left see the death as a consequenc­e of systemic racism in the police.

Widespread rioting and looting since appear to have deepened the polarisati­on. Politician­s from the left and the ruling centrist party have condemned the collection for the policeman, launched by far-right media commentato­r Jean Messiha.

“Jean Messiha is playing with fire,” ruling party MP Eric Bothorel wrote on Twitter, calling it “indecent and scandalous”.

The head of the Socialist party, Olivier Faure, attacked Gofundme, saying it was facilitati­ng a “shameful” collection.

Senior hard-left MP Mathilde Panot highlighte­d how a collection for a former boxer who had punched police officers during “Yellow Vest” anti-government demonstrat­ions in 2019 had been quickly closed by authoritie­s.

“Killing a young North African in France in 2023 can earn you a lot of money,” she wrote. Messiha, a former adviser to far-right leader Marine Le Pen, celebrated on Twitter when his fund overtook the one for the family of Nahel at the weekend. When launching the appeal, he said it was for an officer who was “doing his work and is paying a heavy price”.

The head of the right-wing Republican­s party, Eric Ciotti, defended the collection yesterday and said he might contribute. The officer’s family were “facing difficulti­es”, he said.

The 38-year-old policeman, named by French media as Florian M, has been detained and charged with voluntary manslaught­er.

In a video of the shooting, he can be seen with a colleague stopping a yellow Mercedes which Nahel was driving without a licence in the western Paris suburb of Nanterre last Tuesday morning. The officer has his weapon drawn and shoots Nahel at point-blank range as he drives off.

Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne said it “was obviously not in line with the rules of engagement for police”.

Florian M also faces charges of making false statements, having initially claimed that he opened fire when Nahel drove at him.

Another teenager in the car said after the incident that the officers had hit Nahel with the butts of their guns before opening fire. A voice can be heard on the video saying: “You are going to get a bullet in the head.”

Meanwhile, demonstrat­ions began at French town halls yesterday opposing nearly a week of violent protests over the shooting, even as the first signs emerged that the unrest was beginning to ease. Yesterday’s demonstrat­ions – called a “mobilisati­on of citizens for a return to republican order” – came after the home of the mayor of a Paris suburb was rammed with a flaming car, prompting outrage.

An associatio­n of the country’s mayors noted that areas “everywhere in France are the scene of serious unrest, which targets republican symbols with extreme violence”.

A total of 157 people were arrested in relation to the unrest nationwide, according to the interior ministry – a fraction of the number taken into custody the night before. Three police officers were also wounded. Among 3200 people arrested in rioting since last Tuesday, the average age was 17, Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said. Internal affairs investigat­ors yesterday began interviewi­ng a passenger in the car Nahel was driving.

 ?? | AFP ?? FRENCH mayors, holding a banner reading ‘together for the republic’, take part in a nationwide protest in front of a town hall, in L’Hay-lesRoses, south of Paris, yesterday, after rioters rammed a vehicle into the mayor’s house, injuring his wife and one of his children.
| AFP FRENCH mayors, holding a banner reading ‘together for the republic’, take part in a nationwide protest in front of a town hall, in L’Hay-lesRoses, south of Paris, yesterday, after rioters rammed a vehicle into the mayor’s house, injuring his wife and one of his children.

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