Tag: Paris

  • Richardson leads USA to 4x100m gold in Paris 2024 Olympics

    Richardson leads USA to 4x100m gold in Paris 2024 Olympics

    Sha’Carri Richardson delivered a sensational anchor leg to propel the United States to gold with a time of 41.78 seconds in a thrilling women’s 4x100m relay at the Paris Olympics on Friday, August 9.

    The US team was in fourth place when Richardson received the baton, but her blistering speed secured the victory in dramatic fashion.

    Gabby Thomas, the US third leg and 200m champion, praised Richardson’s performance, saying, “She is so fast. We know we’re in good hands as soon as she gets her hands on the baton.”

    The race, which took place under rainy conditions that began just before the start, saw Great Britain, featuring Dina Asher-Smith, Imani Lansiquot, Amy Hunt, and Daryll Neita, finish in 41.85 seconds to claim silver—Great Britain’s best result in this event since 1956. Germany took bronze with a time of 41.97, marking the first time a unified German team medaled in this event since 1960. Defending champions Jamaica finished a surprising fifth, clocking 42.29 seconds.

    Initially, there was some confusion as the scoreboard at Stade de France incorrectly showed Great Britain as the winners. Richardson, appearing perplexed by the order of finish, watched as the result was quickly corrected, confirming the US victory.

    The American team had to battle through the race, with Melissa Jefferson handing off the baton in third, Twanisha Terry moving them up to second, and Richardson starting her anchor leg in fourth after receiving the baton from Thomas.

    Despite a challenging final handoff that caused Richardson to momentarily lose momentum, she delivered a stunning 10.09-second leg to overtake the competition. Neita, running the final leg for Great Britain, clocked 10.33 seconds, while Germany’s Rebekka Haase finished her anchor leg in 10.46 seconds.

    Reflecting on her race, Richardson said, “I just remember trusting my third leg, trusting Gabby, and knowing that she’s gonna put that stick in my hand no matter what, and to leave my best on the track.”

    Great Britain, although slowed by a handoff between their second and third runners, celebrated their achievement of winning a third consecutive Olympic medal in the event.

    Lansiquot, who ran Great Britain’s fastest leg in 10.13 seconds, expressed her pride, saying, “It’s been not just one year in the making, it’s been eight years in the making and it’s been bronze, bronze and we finally upgraded to silver. I can’t express how proud I am of these women. We came together. We got the job done. And when the heavens opened up, we still kept our heads and did it.”

    The United States had shown strong form in the preliminaries, recording the fastest time of 41.94 seconds despite a challenging second handoff.

    Great Britain also impressed in the heats, with a time of 42.03 seconds, the second-fastest in qualifying, bolstered by the same sprinters who had previously set the world-leading time of 41.55 in July.

  • Spain wins Olympic men’s gold at Paris 2024

    Spain wins Olympic men’s gold at Paris 2024

    Spain‘s remarkable run in international football continued as they narrowly defeated France in a dramatic Olympic men’s final at Paris 2024, securing the gold medal.

    Despite France’s valiant comeback from a 3-1 deficit to force extra time, Spain ultimately emerged victorious.

    The hosts initially took an early lead, but Spain quickly turned the tide, scoring twice before the break. France, led by Thierry Henry, staged an impressive second-half rally to draw level and push the match into extra time. However, it was Spain’s substitute, Sergio Camello, who held his nerve during the tense moments, scoring twice in extra time to seal the victory.

    Camello’s goals set off wild celebrations among the Spanish team, who surrounded the Rayo Vallecano forward as they clinched their first Olympic gold since 1992. This victory adds to Spain’s growing list of achievements, coming just over a month after their men’s team triumphed in the European Championship against England.

    In addition to their Olympic success, Spain’s dominance extends to youth and women’s football, with the men’s under-19 team winning the European Championship last month and the women’s team claiming the World Cup title last year.

    For France, the loss was bittersweet. Although they initially felt the sting of defeat, the mood shifted to one of celebration as the squad received their silver medals. Reflecting on the journey, Henry expressed pride in his team’s efforts, saying, “It wasn’t easy to build this team up, but I’m proud of the work we did.”

    With France unable to secure the gold, Great Britain maintained fifth place in the Paris 2024 medal standings. Both nations have won 14 gold medals, but Team GB edges ahead with a total of 57 medals, just one more than France.

  • 19-year-old grabs climbing gold for Britain

    19-year-old grabs climbing gold for Britain

    Toby Roberts secured Great Britain’s 14th gold medal in Paris with a thrilling victory in the boulder and lead climbing event, marking the nation’s first Olympic medal in this sport.

    The 19-year-old climber was visibly stunned by his triumph, with his head in his hands as he watched Japanese favorite Sorato Anraku, the world silver medalist, falter on the 15-meter wall, handing Roberts the top spot.

    Roberts, who honed his skills on a DIY climbing wall built in his father’s garden, had initially placed third in the boulder section, which featured four challenging routes. He later surged to the provisional lead with a score of 92.1 out of 100.

    Anraku needed just 86 points on the lead wall to surpass Roberts, but he slipped, causing a collective gasp from the crowd of 6,000 spectators.

    “I am just lost for words,” Roberts told the BBC. “Realizing I had won the gold in that moment was simply incredible.”

    With Roberts’ gold medal, climbing, a sport introduced at the Tokyo Games, becomes the 44th different sport in which Great Britain has won an Olympic medal.

    Sorato Anraku, 17, claimed silver for Japan, while veteran Jakob Schubert, 33, earned the bronze. British climber Hamish McArthur finished in fifth place.

  • Day 12: Paris Olympics 2024 medal table

    Day 12: Paris Olympics 2024 medal table

    Today marks the 12th day of the Paris 2024 Olympics.

    So far, the United States has the most gold medals, 24, followed by China, with 22. The former also has the most medals won in the tournament so far with 86. China follows with 59 medals.

    Egypt, Jamaica, South Africa, and Uganda are among the African countries with medals.

    Below is a medal table by BBC Sports showcasing the countries with their respective medals earned so far.

    RankCountryGoldSilverBronzeTotal
    1United States24313186
    2China22211659
    3Australia14121036
    4France13161948
    5Great Britain12151946
    6South Korea118726
    7Japan1161229
    8Italy910726
    9Netherlands85619
    10Germany85417
    11Canada64818
    12Ireland4037
    13New Zealand3519
    14Hungary3328
    14Sweden3328
    16Romania3317
    17Brazil25613
    18Spain23510
    19Ukraine2237
    20Croatia2125
    21Belgium2035
    22Hong Kong2024
    23Philippines2013
    24Azerbaijan2002
    24Serbia2002
    26Israel1416
    27Switzerland1247
    28Georgia1214
    29Greece1157
    30Kazakhstan1135
    31Kenya1124
    31South Africa1124
    33Chile1102
    33Denmark1102
    33Ecuador1102
    33St Lucia1102
    33Uganda1102
    38Chinese Taipei1045
    39Uzbekistan1023
    40Cuba1012
    40Czech Republic1012
    40Guatemala1012
    43Algeria1001
    43Argentina1001
    43Bahrain1001
    43Dominica1001
    43Norway1001
    43Slovenia1001
    49Jamaica0314
    50North Korea0235
    51Mexico0213
    52Ethiopia0202
    53Poland0134
    54Turkey0123
    55Kosovo0112
    55Kyrgyzstan0112
    55Thailand0112
    58Armenia0101
    58Colombia0101
    58Fiji0101
    58Mongolia0101
    58Tunisia0101
    63India0033
    63Tajikistan0033
    65Dominican Republic0022
    65Lithuania0022
    65Malaysia0022
    65Moldova0022
    69Austria0011
    69Cape Verde0011
    69Egypt0011
    69Grenada0011
    69Indonesia0011
    69Iran0011
    69Portugal0011
    69Slovakia0011
    77Afghanistan0000
    77Albania0000
    77American Samoa0000
    77Andorra0000
    77Angola0000
    77Antigua and Barbuda0000
    77Aruba0000
    77Bahamas0000
    77Bangladesh0000
    77Barbados0000
    77Belize0000
    77Benin0000
    77Bermuda0000
    77Bhutan0000
    77Bolivia0000
    77Bosnia-Herzegovina0000
    77Botswana0000
    77Brunei0000
    77Bulgaria0000
    77Burkina Faso0000
    77Burundi0000
    77Cambodia0000
    77Cameroon0000
    77Cayman Islands0000
    77Central African Republic0000
    77Chad0000
    77Comoros0000
    77Congo0000
    77Cook Islands0000
    77Costa Rica0000
    77Ivory Coast0000
    77Cyprus0000
    77Djibouti0000
    77DR Congo0000
    77El Salvador0000
    77Refugee Olympic Team0000
    77Equatorial Guinea0000
    77Eritrea0000
    77Estonia0000
    77Eswatini0000
    77Finland0000
    77Gabon0000
    77Gambia0000
    77Ghana0000
    77Guam0000
    77Guinea0000
    77Guinea-Bissau0000
    77Guyana0000
    77Haiti0000
    77Honduras0000
    77Iceland0000
    77Iraq0000
    77Jordan0000
    77Kiribati0000
    77Kuwait0000
    77Laos0000
    77Latvia0000
    77Lebanon0000
    77Lesotho0000
    77Liberia0000
    77Libya0000
    77Liechtenstein0000
    77Luxembourg0000
    77Madagascar0000
    77Malawi0000
    77Maldives0000
    77Mali0000
    77Malta0000
    77Marshall Islands0000
    77Mauritania0000
    77Mauritius0000
    77Micronesia0000
    77Monaco0000
    77Montenegro0000
    77Morocco0000
    77Mozambique0000
    77Myanmar0000
    77Namibia0000
    77Nauru0000
    77Nepal0000
    77Nicaragua0000
    77Niger0000
    77Nigeria0000
    77North Macedonia0000
    77Oman0000
    77Pakistan0000
    77Palau0000
    77Palestine0000
    77Panama0000
    77Papua New Guinea0000
    77Paraguay0000
    77Peru0000
    77Puerto Rico0000
    77Qatar0000
    77Rwanda0000
    77Samoa0000
    77San Marino0000
    77Sao Tome and Principe0000
    77Saudi Arabia0000
    77Senegal0000
    77Seychelles0000
    77Sierra Leone0000
    77Singapore0000
    77Solomon Islands0000
    77Somalia0000
    77South Sudan0000
    77Sri Lanka0000
    77St Kitts and Nevis0000
    77St Vincent and the Grenadines0000
    77Sudan0000
    77Suriname0000
    77Syria0000
    77Tanzania0000
    77East Timor0000
    77Togo0000
    77Tonga0000
    77Trinidad and Tobago0000
    77Turkmenistan0000
    77Tuvalu0000
    77United Arab Emirates0000
    77Uruguay0000
    77Vanuatu0000
    77Venezuela0000
    77Vietnam0000
    77British Virgin Islands0000
    77American Virgin Islands0000
    77Yemen0000
    77Zambia0000
    77Zimbabwe0000

  • British trio progress in Women’s 200m at Paris 2024 Olympics

    British trio progress in Women’s 200m at Paris 2024 Olympics

    Great Britain’s Daryll Neita, Dina Asher-Smith, and Bianca Williams all advanced to the semi-finals of the women’s 200m at Paris 2024, following the withdrawal of world champion Shericka Jackson.

    Neita, who narrowly missed out on a 100m podium finish, coming in fourth, clocked 22.39 seconds in her 200m heat. Julien Alfred of St Lucia, who won gold in the 100m, continued her strong performance with a time of 22.41 seconds.

    Asher-Smith, who was disappointed with her 100m result, ran 22.28 seconds, finishing second in her heat behind Nigeria’s Favour Ofili. Williams qualified with a time of 22.77 seconds.

    An emotional Asher-Smith expressed her frustration after the 100m, stating to BBC Sport: “I’m just angry from yesterday to be honest. I was angry but coming down the home straight I was like ‘relax, relax.’ Yeah, I’m very upset,” she added.

    Jamaican sprinter Jackson, the reigning world 200m champion, withdrew from the event, shifting the spotlight to American Gabrielle Thomas, who is now the favourite for gold. Thomas, the fastest woman in the 200m this year, set the fastest time of the first round with 22.20 seconds.

    Alfred, celebrating her historic gold in the 100m, won her 200m heat with a time of 22.41 seconds. Jackson’s withdrawal from the 200m has opened up the competition, especially with reigning champion Elaine Thompson-Herah out due to an Achilles tendon injury.

    Neita, reflecting on her performance, told BBC Sport: “It feels like I went to sleep here [at the track] last night. It has been a quick turnaround. Fourth was so bittersweet. I’ve had a little sleep on it and honestly I’m really proud of myself. It gives me so much confidence and a lot of motivation going into tomorrow.”

    In other events, Lina Nielsen qualified for the women’s 400m hurdles semi-finals with a time of 54.65 seconds, while Jessie Knight will have to go through a repechage after finishing fifth with 55.39 seconds. Femke Bol won her heat with 53.38 seconds, securing a mixed 4x400m relay gold for the Netherlands. Defending champion Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone won her heat in 53.60 seconds, setting up a potential gold-medal showdown with Bol.

    Great Britain’s Elizabeth Bird advanced to the women’s 3,000m steeplechase final with a time of 9:16.46, while Aimee Pratt did not qualify. Jacob Fincham-Dukes reached the men’s long jump final with a qualifying leap of 7.96m, while Miltiadis Tentoglou led the qualifiers with a jump of 8.32m.

  • Jamaica’s Olympic champion, Thompson-Herah, to miss Paris Olympics over Achilles injury

    Jamaica’s Olympic champion, Thompson-Herah, to miss Paris Olympics over Achilles injury

    Elaine Thompson-Herah, the two-time Olympic champion in the 100m and 200m, has announced she will miss the Paris Olympics due to an Achilles injury.

    The 31-year-old Jamaican sprinter, who has five Olympic gold medals to her name, sustained the injury during the New York City Grand Prix on June 9 and had to be carried off the track.

    Thompson-Herah, renowned for her exceptional sprinting prowess, is the only sprinter besides her compatriot Usain Bolt to have won multiple Olympic titles in both the 100m and 200m.

    She was preparing to defend her 100m title, having opted out of the 200m trials in Jamaica.

    In a heartfelt Instagram post, Thompson-Herah revealed that a “small tear on my Achilles tendon” has dashed her hopes of competing in her third Olympics.

    “It’s a long road but I am willing to start over and keep working to make a full recovery and resume my track career,” she wrote.

    “I am hurt and devastated to be missing the Olympics this year but at the end of the day it’s sports and my health comes first.”

    Jamaica has dominated the women’s 100m at the Olympics, securing gold in the event for the past four consecutive Games.

    Thompson-Herah contributed significantly to this legacy, winning gold in both the 100m and 200m at the Rio 2016 Olympics and successfully defending her titles in Tokyo in 2021.

    She also clinched her fifth Olympic gold in Tokyo as part of Jamaica’s 4x100m relay team.

  • Ntim Fordjour sells Ghana’s education transformation at UNESCO high-level dialogue

    Ntim Fordjour sells Ghana’s education transformation at UNESCO high-level dialogue

    Deputy Minister for Education, Rev. John Ntim Fordjour, recently took centre stage at a high-level dialogue at UNESCO Headquarters in Paris, where he highlighted Ghana’s significant strides in educational transformation.

    This event, attended by global education leaders and policymakers, provided an excellent platform for Fordjour to showcase Ghana’s innovative approaches and achievements in improving its education system.

    During his address, Fordjour emphasized Ghana’s commitment to enhancing access to quality education for all. He outlined key initiatives and reforms that have been implemented to address challenges and foster positive changes in the education sector.

    These initiatives include improvements in infrastructure, curriculum development, teacher training, and the adoption of technology to support learning outcomes.

    Fordjour also underscored Ghana’s progress in increasing enrollment rates and improving educational outcomes at various levels.

    He highlighted specific programs aimed at promoting inclusive education and reducing disparities, particularly in underserved communities and among vulnerable populations.

    The dialogue not only showcased Ghana’s achievements but also provided an opportunity for Fordjour to exchange ideas and best practices with international counterparts. He emphasized collaborative efforts between Ghana and UNESCO in advancing global education agendas, including sustainable development goals related to education, equity, and lifelong learning.

    “At the just-ended High-Level Dialogue on Education Finance and Digital Learning at UNESCO Headquarters in Paris, we highlighted the strides made through Ghana’s innovative financing approach of GALOP and the wave of digital learning transformation in our schools,” Fordjour stated.

    “GALOP, a results-based intervention, has seen a transformation of learning outcomes in 10,579 basic schools across Ghana with the support of the World Bank, GPE, and FCDO UK. Additional innovative financing called Ghana Education Outcomes Fund has, within the first year, impacted some 17,000 out-of-school children who got reintegrated into schools, out of a target of 70,000 OOSC.”

    “Digital learning content and platforms such as Learning Passport, MineCraft, iBox, and iCampus have been deployed into schools by CENDLOS to ensure 21st-century learning is accessible for free digitally,” he added.

    Fordjour’s participation in the UNESCO dialogue underscores Ghana’s commitment to transforming its education sector and ensuring that all citizens have access to quality education.

  • Alcaraz beats Sinner to reach Paris final against Zverev

    Alcaraz beats Sinner to reach Paris final against Zverev

    Carlos Alcaraz advanced closer to his first French Open title with a thrilling victory over Jannik Sinner in a captivating semi-final match.

    The Spanish third seed displayed remarkable resilience, twice overcoming deficits to secure a 2-6 6-3 3-6 6-4 6-3 triumph.

    Alcaraz faced a tense moment when he missed two match points, first hitting the net after a baseline exchange and then sending a forehand long. However, he capitalized on his third opportunity to seal the victory.

    In the upcoming men’s final on Sunday, Alcaraz will square off against German fourth seed Alexander Zverev.

    Sinner, the Italian second seed, battled cramps in the third set as he aimed for consecutive major titles following his Australian Open triumph in January. Despite his efforts, Alcaraz’s determination and stamina prevailed as he grew stronger as the match progressed.

    “You have to find the joy in suffering, that’s the key,” Alcaraz said.

    “Even more here on clay – long rallies, four-hour matches, five sets, you have to fight. But you have to enjoy suffering.”

    The 21-year-old is now just one win away from completing three legs of a career Grand Slam, having already triumphed at the 2022 US Open and last year’s Wimbledon.

    In the second semi-final later on Friday, 27-year-old Alexander Zverev won 2-6 6-2 6-4 6-2 against Norwegian seventh seed Casper Ruud.

    Zverev played just hours after a trial in Berlin over domestic abuse allegations made by his former girlfriend was discontinued.

    The emerging rivalry between Sinner and Alcaraz is one that many in tennis believe can fill the void left by the ageing superstars.

    Few will forget their epic US Open quarter-final in 2022, which finished at 2:50 am in New York and featured some jaw-dropping exchanges.

    This was a different type of contest. Neither player found their best level consistently – and rarely at the same time.

    But the match developed into an absorbing encounter where, at times, each man relied on heart as much as their head.

    Sinner, 22, made what could be considered a perfect start, taking Alcaraz’s serve with the two break points he created and twice holding to love for a 4-0 lead.

    By defending robustly and returning with depth, Sinner forced a flurry of mistakes from Alcaraz’s forehand and continued to bewilder his opponent at the start of the second set.

    Another early break put Sinner ahead – but the dynamic swiftly changed.

    Alcaraz, finding better angles and more precision with Sinner not hitting as deep, broke twice to turn a 2-0 deficit into a 5-2 lead and level the match.

    After trading breaks at the start of the third set, Alcaraz could not take four more chances at 2-2 when Sinner struggled with cramp in his playing arm.

    Having received treatment, Sinner recovered to break in the next game before he required further attention – this time on his legs – from the physio.

    Sinner served out to move back in front. However, a wild overhead at 30-15 4-5 in the fourth set, pushing it wide with Alcaraz stranded, proved costly.

    Last year, Alcaraz suffered from full body cramps in his maiden Roland Garros semi-final, blaming it afterwards on the tension of facing the incomparable Novak Djokovic.

    This time, he looked more relaxed as the match wore on and ultimately raced ahead to clinch the decider.

  • Archbishop Agyinasare attends 2024 Explosion of Miracles, Healings, and Deliverance in Paris

    Archbishop Agyinasare attends 2024 Explosion of Miracles, Healings, and Deliverance in Paris

    Archbishop Charles Agyinasare recently concluded a transformative five-day visit to Paris, France, where he participated in the highly anticipated 2024 Explosion of Miracles, Healings, and Deliverance event.

    Hosted by the Impact Centre Chrétien (ICC) and led by Apostle Yvan Castanou, this event drew thousands from across the country to the ICC’s impressive mega auditorium, renowned for its modern facilities and grand architecture.

    Throughout the event, the atmosphere buzzed with anticipation as worshippers gathered for a powerful encounter with God.

    The program featured fervent worship, impactful preaching, and a palpable sense of the Holy Spirit’s presence, reminiscent of the day of Pentecost.

    From the outset, the manifestation of God’s power was evident as testimonies of miraculous healings emerged. Growth disappeared, the deaf regained their hearing, the blind received sight, and the mute found their voices.

    The lame walked, chronic pain vanished, and countless others experienced deliverance from debilitating conditions. These miracles extended beyond the auditorium, spreading to ICC branches worldwide connected online.

    Archbishop Agyinasare’s dynamic ministry played a pivotal role in the event. Through impassioned sermons, he emphasized God’s compassion, the power of prayer, and the importance of living a life dedicated to God.

    Attendees responded by committing or recommitting their lives to Christ, igniting a spiritual awakening that extended beyond physical healings.

    As attendees returned home, reports of family salvations emerged, signaling a broader revival across France.

    The 2024 Explosion of Miracles, Healing, and Deliverance left an indelible mark on the spiritual landscape of the nation, setting the stage for transformative change and ushering in a new era of faith and revival.

  • Migrant camp in central Paris being cleared by police

    Migrant camp in central Paris being cleared by police

    The police in France removed migrants from a temporary camp in Paris near the Seine River on Tuesday. Aid groups say this is part of a plan to clear out poor people before the Summer Olympics.

    Early in the morning on a very cold April day, police woke up about 30 young boys and men from West Africa. They were told to pack up their tents and things. Most of them were young and trying to get papers to live in the country.

    “I was already afraid, but now I’m even more scared because I don’t know where to go,” said 16-year-old Boubacar Traore. He ran away from fighting in Burkina Faso and came to France two months ago.

    The police evicted a big squatter camp near Paris a few days ago. Now they are carrying out an operation.

    Every spring, migrant tent camps are cleared out after a break in the winter. During the break, the authorities do not remove anyone from the camps.

    “But organizations helping migrants and other vulnerable people in Paris are saying that they are working harder before the Olympics. ” They mention that instead of getting a place to stay near Paris, where many asylum-seekers have court dates, they are being sent far away from the capital.

    The officials want to make sure the Olympics Games are held in a tidy place. “They want to hide the fact that many migrants and asylum seekers live in Paris from the tourists,” said Elias Hufganel, a volunteer helping refugees and immigrants at the Paris tent camp on Tuesday.

    The police in Paris did an operation for safety reasons because the tent camp was close to schools.

    Two big buses were on a street nearby going to Besançon, which is about 400 kilometers (240 miles) southeast of Paris. Officials suggested moving the young men to a new place and giving them a place to stay for three weeks. But many people didn’t want to accept the offer because they were afraid of becoming even more alone and not having a plan after the three weeks ended.

    Traore didn’t want to go on the trip because he has a court date in Paris in two days. We didn’t know where he would sleep on Tuesday night.

  • Mayors of Copenhagen and Paris share insights gained from Notre Dame cathedral fires

    Mayors of Copenhagen and Paris share insights gained from Notre Dame cathedral fires

    The mayor of Copenhagen talked to the mayor of Paris to learn from the rebuilding of Notre Dame cathedral after a fire damaged a 400-year-old building in Copenhagen.

    Firefighters were still at the place where a fire destroyed half of Copenhagen’s Old Stock Exchange, which was built in 1615, and caused its iconic dragon-tail spire to fall down, two days later.

    The Danish Chamber of Commerce wants to rebuild the building they own, the Old Stock Exchange, where they are located. Thus far, no one has decided who will pay for a reconstruction project that would be very expensive and take a long time.

    Sophie Hæstorp Andersen, the mayor of Copenhagen, talked to the Associated Press. She said she talked to the mayor of Paris, Anne Hildago, about how they are fixing the Notre Dame cathedral after it caught fire in April 2019. It will be finished this year.

    Hildago shared helpful advice on how to work fast, how Paris managed donations, and the urgent restoration work that needs to be done, according to Hæstorp Andersen.

    We have a big job ahead as we work to rebuild Boersen with the Danish Chamber of Commerce. “But we know this can be done fast,” she said, using the Danish name of the stock exchange building.

    She said that Hildago asked a team from Denmark to come and meet the people working on rebuilding the spire of Notre Dame.

    The fire on Tuesday started on the roof while the building was being fixed, but the cause is not known yet. The police have not been able to go inside the burned part of the building to find out what happened.

    The firefighters are working to make the building safe. They think they will be there for one more day.

    Some streets near the burned building, including a big road next to it, will stay closed until at least Monday, according to Danish media.

    When the building caught on fire on Tuesday, people nearby, Chamber of Commerce workers, police and firefighters rushed inside to rescue valuable things. A lot of the important things in the building, like valuable paintings and other art, were rescued. One of the paintings was a big one from 1895 called “From Copenhagen Stock Exchange” by a Danish artist named P. SThe Chamber of Commerce said Krøyer.

    The building has a green roof and a tall spire shaped like four dragon tails. It’s next to the Danish parliament and is famous for being a place to trade things.

    The building is a great example of Dutch Renaissance style in Denmark. The Chamber of Commerce moved into the building after the stock exchange left in 1974.

  • Macron asserts he is certain Russia will attack Olympics in Paris

    Macron asserts he is certain Russia will attack Olympics in Paris

    French President Emmanuel Macron said on Thursday that he is sure Russia will try to cause trouble at the Paris Olympics this summer. This shows that the games are taking place in a tense global situation.

    Macron said he has no doubt, even about information, when asked if he thinks Russia will try to target the Olympics.

    The Russian embassy in Paris didn’t reply right away to a request for comment.

    Macron spoke at an event in Paris for the opening of the new Olympics swimming center and said that he is now more aware of foreign dangers that could affect the security and organization of the games.

    The big event is happening while there are many problems in the world, like Russia fighting in Ukraine and Israel having a conflict with Hamas in Gaza. This makes it hard to keep the Olympics safe.

    A person who works for Macron said they can’t say if the President was talking about specific information that shows Russia might try to interfere in the future.

    Instead, she said: “Russia has been getting tougher, and we’ve been noticing it for a few months. ”

    Macron is now being more firm with Russia and said that he is determined to beat them. He also mentioned that European soldiers might go to Ukraine in the future. But he made it clear that France does not want to start a fight with Russia.

    His government has also started to take a harder stance against what they believe are false information campaigns from Russia in Europe.

    Earlier this week, the Foreign Minister of France, Stephane Sejourne, said that France will suggest that all countries in the European Union should put sanctions on people who are spreading false information. This is because France thinks that Russia is trying to make the European Union weaker.

    Russia and the International Olympic Committee

    Russia and the International Olympic Committee (IOC) are not getting along well before the Paris Olympics. Russian and Belarusian athletes will compete without their flags and anthems, and they won’t be in the opening parade.

    At first, they were not allowed to compete in other countries because of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

    Russia announced last year that it wants to bring back the ‘Friendship Games’ in 2024. The International Olympic Committee is not happy about it and sees it as a political move.

    Dmitry Peskov, who speaks for the Kremlin, said this week that the IOC’s treatment of Russia’s plans to host sports events for the world was not okay. He also said that the IOC is harming the Olympics by not staying away from politics.

  • Jackie Appiah shares video of luxurious lifestyle in Paris

    Jackie Appiah shares video of luxurious lifestyle in Paris

    Renowned Ghanaian actress Jackie Appiah is embracing her dream lifestyle to the fullest, living in the lap of luxury.

    The A-list celebrity recently treated herself to a royal experience in Paris, where she documented her journey through a captivating video.

    In pursuit of perfection, Jackie scheduled an appointment with Hermes to meticulously select colours that complemented her diverse wardrobe.

    After the personalised consultation, she indulged in the purchase of several exquisite bags, promptly having them delivered to her exclusive hotel.

    Not stopping there, Jackie savoured the high life by immersing herself in the culinary delights of Paris.

    From posh breakfasts to luxurious lunches and dinners, the actress spared no expense in experiencing the finest dining the city has to offer.

    Known for her affluent lifestyle, Jackie Appiah continued to share glimpses of her extravagant travels and unabashed shopping sprees, confirming that she is truly living the dream.

    Watch video below:

  • Paris’s Eiffel Tower to reopen following six-day strike

    Paris’s Eiffel Tower to reopen following six-day strike

    The Eiffel Tower in Paris was supposed to open again on Sunday after being closed for six days because of strikes.

    Employees first went on strike on Monday because they were unhappy with how the tower was being managed.

    The company that operates the Eiffel Tower, called Société d’Exploitation de la Tour Eiffel (SETE), announced that they made an agreement with the worker’s unions on Saturday.

    There has been another attack at the famous landmark in Paris, this is the second one in the last three months. Paris is getting ready to host the 2024 Olympic Games.

    SETE said sorry to people who bought tickets and promised to give them their money back if their bookings were affected. They lost around 100,000 ticket sales because of this.

    The strong CGT labor union said workers are going on strike because they disagree with SETE’s business model. They think SETE is estimating too many future visitors and not estimating the cost of maintenance and renovation accurately.

    Stéphane Dieu, representing the union, said SETE is only focused on making money quickly.

    The people who are protesting are worried about the monument. The newspaper Le Monde said that it has not been painted for 14 years, instead of the usual seven. Also, other repairs are not being done on time.

    This week’s strike was supposed to last for five days, but the CGT said on Friday that workers voted to continue the strike on Saturday after turning down SETE’s first offer.

    On Saturday, SETE agreed with the unions to keep an eye on the company’s business, investments, and earnings. They will meet every six months to talk about it.

    With the goal of getting its finances in order by 2025, they also agreed to invest around 380m (£325m) by 2031 for repairs and upkeep of the landmark.

    On Thursday, France’s Culture Minister Rachida Dati proposed that the Eiffel Tower be designated as a “historical monument” so that the government can provide funding for any necessary repairs.

    The Eiffel Tower closed on 27 December because workers were protesting how it is managed. They were also marking 100 years since the tower’s creator, Gustave Eiffel, died.

    Eiffel was a civil engineer who became famous for building bridges and viaducts for the French railway. He was most famous for building the tower to show how advanced France was to the rest of the world, at the 1889 Paris Exposition.

    It took just over two years to build, and at that time, it was the tallest building in the world. It quickly became a well-known symbol of Paris.

  • French police exonerated of demeaning victim of sexual assault

    French police exonerated of demeaning victim of sexual assault

    A French policeman who insulted a woman reporting a sexual assault has not been punished by the police court.

    In February 2022, the woman went to a police station in Paris to report what happened.

    The police officer called her and left a message about paperwork. But he accidentally insulted her after he thought he hung up the phone.

    The situation made people angry about how police in France handle victims of sexual abuse.

    At the trial, the court had to think about whether the officer insulted himself or his colleagues, not the woman.

    They asked for the officer to be found not guilty or given a pass because he had a good record in the past.

    A woman judge decided that the comments were not a sexist insult and cleared the officer of any wrongdoing.

    The woman’s lawyer, Arie Alimi, said to the AFP news agency that his client will ask for another decision.

    She said that the courts still support the police.

    The cop got in trouble and then moved to another job. He said sorry to the woman in court for the mean things he said.

    He also said that he had to ask Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin to let him keep his job.

    Mr Darmanin was really upset about the case. He said that when the officer’s wrongdoing was discovered, the officer should not be in the police anymore.

    In February 2022, he said on Europe 1 radio that the man had made all the women who want to report a problem look bad, but it’s better for them to go to the police station to report it.

    Mr Darmanin also said the officer had disrespected the uniform of the Republic and his 250,000 other police and gendarme colleagues by dirtying and spitting on it.

    The police are looking into the woman’s complaint about being attacked. French media group bfmtv shared this information.

  • Teachers walk out after fight about naked painting at French school

    Teachers walk out after fight about naked painting at French school

    France’s education minister went to a school where some students didn’t want to see a painting of naked women. This made the teachers leave their work.

    The students said their teacher made mean comments about race and Islam, but the school says it’s not true.

    The teachers at Jacques-Cartier school near Paris said they didn’t want to work.

    There were a lot of problems at the school since the beginning of the school year. Parents kept complaining about the work their kids had to do and the punishments given out.

    The problem started when a teacher showed Diana and Actaeon, a painting from the Renaissance period that tells a story from a book called Metamorphoses.

    Sophie Venetitay from the Snes-FSU teachers union said that some 11 and 12-year-old students in their first year of high school were upset by a painting made by Italian artist Giuseppe Cesari in the 17th century.

    “Some students looked away, felt upset, and said they were surprised,” Ms. She also mentioned that “some students claimed the teacher said racist things” during a class conversation.

    The day after, a French news source said that a parent sent a letter to the principal saying that their child was not able to talk during a class conversation.

    Staff felt like they did not have enough help and were working in a bad environment, Ms Venetitay said.

    She said that this case reminds her of the violent murder of Samuel Paty. He was killed after showing drawings of the Prophet Muhammad in a class.

    The French government thinks that false stories about the teacher caused an 18-year-old Chechen refugee who had been radicalized to kill him near the school in a Paris suburb. Six teenagers were found guilty of being involved in the murder last week.

    Education Minister Gabriel Attal said that students who made complaints at Jacques-Cartier school will be punished, and a team will check the school to make sure it follows the rules of the country.

    On Tuesday, the school started classes again after being closed for a few days.

  • Missing €750k ring discovered in Paris Ritz vacuum bag

    Missing €750k ring discovered in Paris Ritz vacuum bag

    A ring that costs a lot of money, around €750,000 (or £643,000), was lost at the Ritz hotel in Paris. But it has been found in a vacuum cleaner.

    The boss of a Malaysian businesswoman who was staying at the hotel went to the police on Friday. She thought that one of the hotel workers stole something from her.

    The security guards at the Ritz hotel found a ring in a dust-filled vacuum bag on Sunday, according to Le Parisien.

    The newspaper said that the visitor went to London on Friday, but now she will go back to Paris to get her ring.

    The Ritz said they gave the guest three extra nights to apologize for the trouble, but she doesn’t want to use them.

    The hotel told Le Parisien that the security guards found the ring this morning because they worked carefully.

    “We want to thank the workers at the Ritz Paris who helped with the search and who do their job well every day. ”

    The woman who does business told the police that she left the ring on the table in her hotel room on Friday. She went shopping in the city for a few hours, and when she came back, the ring was missing.

    The police are taking care of the ring until the woman can get it back.

    Jewellery has gone missing from the hotel before.

    In 2018, five men with weapons stole more than €4m (£3. 5m) worth of jewelry from a famous store.

    Later in the same year, someone from the Saudi royal family said that a lot of expensive jewelry was stolen from their hotel room.

  • First image of German tourist stabbed to death close to Eiffel Tower in Paris

    First image of German tourist stabbed to death close to Eiffel Tower in Paris

    The first picture of the 24-year-old German man who was stabbed near the Eiffel Tower on Saturday has been released.

    Collin was attacked by a person who says they are part of ISIS named Armand Rajabpour-Miyandoab.

    Both Collin and his wife worked as nurses in a retirement home in Germany since January, according to an investigator.

    He said: “The person who got killed really liked helping others. ”

    ‘While on vacation in Paris, he went to the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, and Disneyland. ’

    Rajabpour-Miyandoab, who had serious mental health issues and was supposed to be watched by France’s intelligence services, attacked Collin in front of his wife and another female friend.

    Later, he focused on a British person named Melvyn.

    The 66-year-old person was in Paris for vacation and is now in a hospital in central Paris, recovering from an injury to their right eye.

    Rajabpour-Miyandoab was expected to be accused of many crimes, including terrorist murder, today.

    France’s Minister for the Inside, Gérald Darmanin, said the person being investigated was on a list for surveillance.

    Rajabpour-Miyandoab was really mad about many Muslims being killed in Gaza by the Israeli military. He said that France was involved in it, according to Mr. Darmanin

  • Paris attack: Suspect’s mother ‘raised concern’ prior to assault

    Paris attack: Suspect’s mother ‘raised concern’ prior to assault

    The mother of a man who is believed to have stabbed a German tourist to death near the Eiffel Tower in Paris had expressed worries about her son a few weeks before the incident, according to a prosecutor.

    Two more people, including a man from Britain, got hurt in the attack on Saturday.

    A 26-year-old man from France was arrested, and officials who investigate terrorism are looking into the case.

    The French minister inside the country said the person who attacked failed to receive proper care for their mental health.

    Gérald Darmanin said to BFM TV that the person who attacked had a serious mental illness. He also said that doctors had mentioned on a few occasions that the person was getting better, acting more normal, and could be released from care.

    Prosecutor Jean-François Ricard said the suspect promised to support the Islamic State group (IS).

    The prosecutor said that Armand R, who was born in France to Iranian parents, became a Muslim when he was 18 years old. In 2016, he was sent to jail for four years because he wanted to go to Syria and join IS.

    Mr Ricard said the police were watching the suspect because they thought he might be involved in extremism. They have also arrested three people, including some of his family, for questioning.

    He said that the attacker’s mother told the news that she was worried about her son’s behavior because he had become withdrawn and quiet in late October.

    But, there wasn’t enough information to start a new trial, he said.

    The police said the person they think did the bad thing was supposed to be getting help for mental health problems.

    The person who died in the attack was a tourist from Germany who worked as a nurse.

    Mr Darmanin said the person who got hurt was with his wife when someone attacked and killed him with a knife on Quai de Grenelle.

    He said a taxi driver saved the wife’s life and the suspect ran away over a bridge over the River Seine.

    After going to the other side of the river, he hurt two more people: a 60-year-old man from France and a 66-year-old tourist from Britain who got hit in the eye with a hammer.

    The police used a Taser to stop the suspect and arrested them for planning to kill someone. They are also suspected of trying to kill someone as part of a terrorist plot.

    The two hurt people got help from emergency workers and on Sunday, the Health Minister said to the French media that they were doing well.

    A video posted online seemed to show the police catching the suspect with guns not too far from where the attack happened.

    Mr Darmanin said the person who attacked was heard shouting “Allahu Akbar” and told police that he was upset because many Muslims are dying in Afghanistan and Palestine.

    The suspect also said that France helped cause the deaths of Palestinians in Gaza.

  • Homeless people in Paris relocated as France gets ready for Olympics

    It’s 6:30 a.m., a late summer morning in Paris. Amid the noise emanating from the Stalingrad metro station, northeast of the French capital, hundreds of migrants, most of the men, slept huddled under a viaduct. Some lay on pieces of cardboard and old mattresses behind urine-soaked fences, others lay awake at the edge of the road.

    There were rumors that a government bus was about to pick them up. Some waited impatiently, hoping that they would eventually be accommodated, most were confused and scared, fearing they would be forced to leave Paris. For months, the French government has been trying to speed up the transfer of homeless Parisians to other parts of the country, as part of a plan to relieve some of the pressure on emergency housing services. capital level. According to the government, each week, between 50 and 150 people are taken to one of 10 locations across France.

    Despite the government denying any connection to the Olympics, which Paris will host in the summer of 2024, some NGOs and elected officials believe the Games are part of the reason. due to which this relocation plan was recently activated.

    “We heard they were coming to take us today, but I don’t know where to go,” Obsa, a 31-year-old Ethiopian political refugee, told CNN. He wishes to be identified under a pseudonym for fear of reprisals. Obsa made the dangerous journey to France in 2017, from Ethiopia to Sudan and Libya, then across the Mediterranean to Italy.

    He now has a full-time job in Paris, but even after many years of living in the city, he still cannot find permanent housing, largely due to the extremely high cost of rent in the capital. capital and the supply of more affordable social housing is very limited. . . Obsa was considering emergency accommodation in a hotel, but claims she kicked him out after his wife went with him. “They simply refused. They said:
    we don’t have room for your wife,” he recalled.

    Obsa is not the only one to have this experience. According to Paul Alauzy of Médecins Du Monde, an NGO that works with homeless migrants, as next year’s Olympics approach, Paris hotels have begun canceling emergency housing contracts with government to make room for the expected influx of tourists.

    According to the Fédération des Acteurs Solidaires, which brings together local associations and charities, in 2022 around 50,000 homeless people were housed each night in hotels in Ile-de-France, where of Paris. This year, at least 5,000 previously vacant hotel spaces were cancelled, CNN affiliate BFMTV reported, which may partly explain why refugees like Obsa and his wife were pushed out into the street.

    The Paris prefecture told CNN that the actual loss of emergency lodging was closer to 2,000 as the city sought alternatives to compensate for canceled hotel rooms. However, wasting hotel rooms is not the main problem facing homeless people in France. About half of the country’s homeless population is concentrated in Ile-de-France, where they have access to more charities, employment opportunities and more personal connections.

    According to figures from the Ministry of Housing, of the more than 200,000 homeless people housed each night across the country, 100,000 are in Ile-de-France. Simply put, there is not enough emergency accommodation in Paris to accommodate everyone.

    As Obsa spoke to CNN, dozens of French police approached and surrounded the area. Several large white buses parked and blocked the road. One of the buses carries the sign “Bordeaux”, another “Marseille”, the cities are located hundreds of kilometers from the capital.

    Staff and volunteers from local humanitarian organizations and Paris police spoke to migrants who appeared distressed by what was happening.

    Authorities informed the migrants over loudspeakers that they could board one of the buses to go to Marseille or Bordeaux, where they would be housed. Those wishing to stay in the capital are encouraged to demonstrate that they have a long-term employment contract. But even then, they will not be guaranteed a roof over their heads. Obsa, who works as an IT administrator, said: “I can’t leave, I have a one-year labor contract. “At least I have to stay in Ile-de-France.”

    In total, 1,800 homeless people, the majority of whom are migrants, have been displaced outside Paris since April, according to figures compiled by the Inter-Ministerial Delegation on Accommodation and Access to Housing (Dihal), the government in charge of national policy revealed to CNN. access to housing.

    According to Dihal, about 10 regional temporary shelters, known as SAS, have been set up across the country to welcome new arrivals outside Paris. Each SAS can accommodate up to 50 people. “All of this comes at a critical time, where there is also a preparing for the Olympics”. immigrant’. with the reality of what is happening on the streets of Paris, which means continuing to leave the thousands of people who have arrived on our territory without any support.

    In 2022, France received 155,773 asylum requests, according to the government. Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said in several television interviews that France would openly welcome political refugees, but its doors would remain closed to any migrants arriving in the country. are illegal and do not face repression in their homeland. According to government figures, in 2022 there will be nearly 20,000

    Utopia 56’s Manzi thinks the resettlement effort could be a good idea in principle, but says the problem is that shelters in the area will only house people for three weeks, depending on which city responsible for hosting them and what happens after that is yet to be determined. . uncertain.

    In SAS, some people get help finding housing and jobs for which they qualify, depending on their legal status, but this doesn’t work for everyone. “On average, 25 to 30 percent (of people) return to the streets,” Manzi said. “They find themselves after these three weeks without any solution, and therefore on the sidewalk again.”

    In Bordeaux, one of the cities chosen to host SAS, this number is up to 40%. “They are disappearing,” Harmonie Lecerf-Meunier, deputy mayor of Bordeaux, told CNN. “We think they are returning to Paris.”

    According to Dihal, in recent weeks the number of people leaving the SAS where they were posted has been around 17%.

    Another problem is the lack of emergency accommodation in the areas where migrants are being transferred. “So people will find themselves on the streets again, but not in Paris. We take them out of Paris and put them on the streets in other places… we just solve the problem, we don’t solve it,” Brice said.

    In a press release from May 2023, the government said that the Minister of Housing had “asked counties to work on establishing these centers in conjunction with local elected officials and associations.” . But the city halls of Lyon and Bordeaux, the two cities hosting the SAS, told CNN they were never consulted by the government. “We discovered it the day before,” said Lecerf-Meunier in Bordeaux.

    Similarly, Lyon deputy mayor Sandrine Runel told CNN that the government rushed to calm the situation in Paris and Ile-de-France without ensuring the availability of appropriate resources elsewhere. “The Olympics are an excuse to direct people to regions without thinking and without even checking the available reception capacity of the regions,” she declared.

    “The issue of welcoming foreigners is a difficult one politically and socially,” Brice said, referring to migrants. “And so the government chose not to talk about it, which I think was a mistake.”

    Brice believes that sharing reception responsibilities between regions, if done well, could allow France to provide more thoughtful, humane and ultimately effective assistance to the thousands of migrants arriving. this country every year. However, for the system to work, it must be well-funded and well-managed, Brice said. Most importantly, as activists and host cities argue, everyone involved – from resettled migrants to the cities asked to receive them – must be fully informed. believe and actively participate in planning.

    “If the government fails to take responsibility and provide itself with the appropriate means, it risks defeating the only useful solution to welcoming foreigners in this country,” Brice concluded.

    Back at the homeless camp under the Stalingrad metro station, Abdullatif, 29, from Afghanistan, seemed tense. “I heard we have to leave Paris but I don’t want to. Finally I started training as an electrician and I had to stay here,” said Abdullatif, who only wanted to give his first name. He decided to stay in Paris.

    But the fate of those who decide to stay in the capital is also uncertain. “Either you accept what they offer you, or you go back to the streets,” explains Alauzy, of Médecins Du Monde, who has now witnessed some resettlement activities.

    And, if departures to the regions are voluntary, many

  • Homeless individuals being removed from Paris by France

    Homeless individuals being removed from Paris by France

    It is 6:30 in the morning. One sunny morning in Paris during the end of summer. In the Stalingrad Métro station in northeastern Paris, many migrants, mostly men, sleep crowded under a bridge. Some people sleep on cardboard and old mattresses behind a smelly fence, while others stay awake by the side of the street.

    News is going around that the government buses will come soon to pick them up. Some people are excited and hoping to be given a place to live. However, many others are unsure and scared because they think they might have to leave Paris.

    Over the last few months, the French government has been trying to move homeless people from Paris to other areas in the country. They want to lessen the strain on emergency shelters in the capital city. Every week, the government takes about 50 to 150 people to different places in France.

    Even though the government says it is not connected, some groups and officials think the Olympics are why the relocation plan was started.

    Obsa, a 31-year-old political refugee from Ethiopia, told CNN that he heard that someone was coming to take them today, but he doesn’t know where they are being taken to. He wants to use a fake name because he is worried about getting punished.

    Obsa went to France in 2017. He traveled from Ethiopia to Sudan and Libya, and then he crossed the Mediterranean Sea to Italy.

    He has a job in Paris, but he can’t find a permanent place to live because it’s too expensive and there aren’t many cheap options available. Obsa had been staying in emergency housing at a hotel, but they told him to leave once his wife came to stay with him. They said no. They told us that they didn’t have enough space for my wife.

    Obsa is not the only one who has had that experience. Before the upcoming Olympic Games next year, hotels in Paris are cancelling their agreements with the government for emergency accommodations. This is being done to make room for the large number of tourists expected to arrive. According to Paul Alauzy from Medecins Du Monde, an organization that helps homeless migrants, this is happening.

    In 2022, about 50,000 individuals without homes were staying in hotels every night in the Ile-de-France area, which includes Paris. This information comes from the Federation of Solidarity Actors, a group that brings together local associations and charitable organizations. This year, around 5,000 hotel spots that were available for people have been canceled, according to BFMTV, a news source connected to CNN. This might be one reason why refugees like Obsa and his wife ended up homeless.

    The Paris government said to CNN that around 2,000 emergency housing spots were lost, but they found other ways to make up for the canceled hotel rooms.

    However, the shortage of hotel rooms is not the main issue for homeless people in France. Approximately half of the people without homes in the country are focused in the Ile-de-France area. This region offers more resources like charities, work options, and personal relationships to help them.

    The Ministry of Housing says that out of the more than 200,000 homeless people sleeping in the country every night, 100,000 of them are in the Ile-de-France. In simple words, there are not enough places for people to stay safe in Paris when there is an emergency.

    While speaking with CNN, many French police officers come near and surround the place. Several big white buses park and stop traffic on the street. One bus says “Bordeaux” and another says “Marseille. ” These cities are very far from the capital.

    Members of local charity groups and the police in Paris speak with migrants who seem confused and unsure about what is going on.

    The authorities use a loudspeaker to tell the migrants they can get on a bus to go to Marseille or Bordeaux, where they will have a place to stay. People who want to live in the capital are encouraged to prove that they have a job that will last for a long time.

    But still, they may not have a place to live. “I am unable to go because I have a job contract for one year,” said Obsa, who is employed as an IT administrator. “I need to stay in the Ile-de-France region, at least for some time. ”

    Since April, around 1,800 homeless people, most of whom are migrants, have been relocated from Paris. This information was given to CNN by the Interministerial Delegation for Accommodation and Access to Housing (a government group that includes the Ministry of Interior and Ministry of Housing).

    According to the Dihal, there are 10 temporary shelters called SAS that have been established in various regions of the country to accommodate people who are arriving in France but not in Paris. Each SAS can hold a maximum of 50 individuals.

    Yann Manzi, who started a French organization called Utopia 56 that helps homeless migrants, said that all of this is happening during an important time when preparations for the Olympic Games are also taking place. He also mentioned that the government is unable to handle the situation on the streets of Paris and continues to neglect the thousands of people who have arrived in the country without any support.

    According to the government, France got 155,773 requests for safety in 2022. The Minister of Interior Gerald Darmanin said in a few TV interviews that France will gladly accept political refugees. However, France will not allow any migrants to enter illegally unless they are in danger in their homeland. According to the government, about 20,000 people who came to the country illegally were sent back in 2022.

    During a TV interview on Sunday, the President of France, Emmanuel Macron, said that France is contributing its share in assisting migrants who come to Europe. This includes spending about 2 billion euros every year on temporary housing for homeless people. But he thinks the country can’t help everyone who is sad.

    The Dihal told CNN that the relocation plan is not related to the upcoming Olympic Games. They said the plan is meant to reduce the pressure on the Ile-de-France area and provide better support for homeless people in other regions.

    A representative from Paris 2024 told CNN that the relocation plan is not related to the ongoing Games or Rugby World Cup in France.

    “The problem of providing emergency housing in the Ile-de-France region is not new and has become worse in the past few months. This is a concerning situation, even though the region will be hosting the Paris 2024 Games next year,” stated the spokesperson.

    Manzi, from Utopia 56, believes the idea of moving people to new locations could be a good plan, but the issue is that the shelters in those areas will only provide housing for three weeks, as stated by the cities responsible for hosting them, and it is unclear what will happen afterward.

    In the SAS, certain individuals get assistance in finding housing and work that they qualify for according to their legal status. However, this support doesn’t always work for everyone. Manzi said that about 25 to 30% of people return to living on the streets. “They reach the end of these three weeks without finding any solution, so they end up back on the sidewalks. ”

    In Bordeaux, a city chosen to host a SAS, the percentage is as high as 40%. “They vanish,” said Harmonie Lecerf-Meunier, the deputy mayor of Bordeaux, in response to CNN. “We think they return to Paris. ”

    Recently, about 17% of the people who were sent to the SAS have left, as reported by the Dihal.

    The second issue is that there are not enough places for migrants to stay temporarily in the regions they are being moved to. So, people will be out on the streets again, but not in Paris. We take them out of Paris and put them on other streets. we are just moving the problem around, without fixing it,” said Brice.

    In a statement in May 2023, the government said the housing minister asked local officials and organizations to help create these centers. However, the mayors of Lyon and Bordeaux, where two centers are located, told CNN that they were not consulted by the government. Lecerf-Meunier from Bordeaux said, “We discovered this information one day before. ”

    Similarly, Sandrine Runel, a deputy mayor in Lyon, said to CNN that the government acted quickly to help in Paris and the Ile-de-France, but they didn’t make sure that the necessary resources were available in other places. She said that the Olympics are an excuse to send people to different regions without considering or checking if the regions can handle the additional people.

    Brice said it’s hard to agree on whether or not to welcome foreigners, and this is especially true for migrants. The government has decided not to discuss it, and I think they made a mistake.

    Brice thinks that if France shares reception duties between different areas, it could provide better care and help to the many migrants who come to the country each year. This would be helpful as long as it is done well. Brice said that in order for the system to function properly, it needs to have enough money and be well overseen. The most important thing is that everyone involved, like activists and cities hosting migrants, need to know and be actively part of making plans.

    Brice said, “If the government doesn’t take responsibility and provide the necessary resources, they might ruin the only effective solution for welcoming foreigners in this country. ”

    In the homeless camp under Stalingrad Métro station, there is a man named Abdullatif who is 29 years old and from Afghanistan. He appears to be feeling very worried. I heard that we have to leave Paris, but I really don’t want to go. “I am excited to begin my electrician training and I must remain in this place,” said Abdullatif, who preferred not to share his full name. He chooses to stay in Paris.

    However, we are not sure what will happen to those who choose to remain in the capital. “Alauzy, from Medecins Du Monde, said that if you don’t accept what they give you, you will be homeless again. ”

    Also, when people decide to leave for different areas, they can choose to do so. However, several organizations that are helping with the moving plan told CNN that a lot of the individuals who are migrating are not being given enough information about what they will encounter at their new location before they leave. The mayors of Lyon and Bordeaux agreed with this statement. They said that people came to their cities with a promise of a permanent place to stay, but in reality, there is no guarantee of this after the first three weeks in the local SAS.

    Abdullatif and Obsa, as well as other people who chose not to move, are put on a bus named “Paris” without knowing where it will take them.

    A few days later, CNN got in touch with Obsa again. He said he didn’t have a home and was staying with a friend in Paris for now. He said that the authorities had once again refused to provide him and his wife with emergency social housing.

    They said I don’t belong here, not even in the Ile-de-France area. It’s hard to believe. How can a whole area not have enough room for two people.

  • Niger: First evacuees from the UK land safely in France

    Niger: First evacuees from the UK land safely in France

    The first British nationals to be airlifted out of Niger have safely reached Paris.

    Oliver Dowden, the deputy prime minister, reported that 14 Britons were on the French flight on Wednesday.

    A “very small number of British nationals” were still present, according to the Foreign Office.

    Following the military coup last week, violence has erupted in the nation of west Africa.

    Countries like France and Italy have booked flights for their own nationals, some of whom were also relocated from other nations.

    As of yet, the UK has not organised its own flights.

    The UK government had earlier recommended British citizens to keep indoors and report their locations.

    Less than 100 Britons were thought to be present in Niger.

    Those who had asked to leave Niger and had been able to get to the airport in time for this flight were the first to be evacuated.

    The UK ambassador and a core team remain in Niger to support the extremely limited number of British nationals who are still there, according to a statement from the Foreign Office. We are appreciative to the French for helping with this evacuation.

    “Our advice continues to be if you’re there and need assistance getting out, get in touch with the embassy,” said Mr. Dowden. “We still have staff on the ground and we will work to provide that assistance.”

    The government has announced a temporary staff reduction at its embassy in Niamey, the capital of Niger. Additionally, the US has instructed all non-emergency employees at its embassy to depart.

    German nationals in Niger, who are also believed to number less than 100, have been asked to board French-organized flights out of the country, while the Spanish government has announced that it is evacuating about 70 of its residents.

    On Wednesday, while visiting three African nations, including Nigeria, Foreign Secretary James Cleverly declared: “The UK government’s priority remains the safety of British nationals and helping them get out of the country to safety.”

    The French embassy has come under attack as a result of protests against France, the previous colonial power in Niger, that have been sparked by the coup.

    Early on Wednesday, 262 travellers from Niger landed in Paris, while Italy also booked a flight, which brought 87 refugees to Rome.

    According to the Reuters news agency, the aircraft was carrying 36 Italians, 21 Americans, and one British citizen.

    The uranium-rich nation of Niger has been a crucial ally of the West in the struggle against Islamic extremism in the Sahel. There are military outposts for both France and the US.

    Since Niger’s independence in 1960, President Mohamed Bazoum has been the first democratically elected head of state. Last week, his guards held him.

    In the event that the president is not freed and put back in office within a week, the west African regional organisation Ecowas has threatened to deploy force.

    However, military organisations in Guinea, Mali, and Burkina Faso, three nearby former French colonies, issued warnings that any forcible action would be seen as a declaration of war.

    There are worries that Niger’s new government may turn away from its Western friends and towards Russia, similar to how Burkina Faso and Mali have done following their own military coups.

    Three months ago, airlifts were coordinated out of Sudan as a result of conflict there between rival factions.

    While the flimsy ceasefire held, a negotiated short-term ceasefire permitted UK evacuation flights to depart from an airport near Khartoum, and about 2,341 individuals were transported to safety on 28 UK flights.

  • Gang from Paris steals pricey jewellery worth £13 million after holding staff hostage

    Gang from Paris steals pricey jewellery worth £13 million after holding staff hostage

    Three armed criminals broke into a jeweller store in the centre of Paris and stole luxury items worth approximately £13 million before fleeing the scene.

    The heist happened inside the expensive Piaget watch boutique in the centre of Paris, where the criminals are alleged to have held the staff hostage while barring the clients from leaving.

    The Mail was informed by an investigator that “two men in suits” and “a woman in a dress” were responsible.

    “They calmly entered the Piaget store, then brandished a weapon with a silencer on the barrel to threaten the staff.”

    The robbers forced a staff member to unlock the display windows and a trunk containing some of the most valuable pieces after forcing everyone in the back of the store to the ground.

    Once they acquired enough jewellery, the thieves reportedly left on foot before perhaps boarding nearby two-wheelers.

    A person with direct knowledge of the situation indicated that police were seeking for three suspects as part of the ongoing investigation.

    The heist happened at the business on the Rue de la Paix in the affluent Place Vendome neighbourhood, which is home to a number of jewellers, watchmakers, and luxury brands, around lunchtime.

    In recent years, there have been a lot of armed robberies in the neighbourhood.

    A adjacent Bulgari store next to the Ministry of Justice was broken into in March by criminals who reportedly carried assault guns before fleeing on motorcycles with millions of pounds’ worth of jewellery.

    Jewellery from a Chanel store in the heart of Paris was also stolen by armed attackers last year.

    The four thieves were shown on camera casually leaving the Vendome store with their bag full of high-end products.

    Near the Champs-Elysees in July 2022, burglars stole merchandise worth about £2 million. The same month, a Dinh Van store was also broken into.

    Additionally, in October 2016, a group of masked men held American reality TV star Kim Kardashian at gunpoint during a robbery in her hotel room in Paris, stealing more than £7 million worth of valuables.

  • Chopped fingertip was sent to official house of Emmanuel Macron – Paris prosecutor

    Chopped fingertip was sent to official house of Emmanuel Macron – Paris prosecutor

    The Paris prosecutor‘s office reports that a police inquiry has been opened following the delivery of a severed finger to the French president’s official house.

    The prosecutor’s office told CNN on Thursday that the item that was brought to the Elysee palace had “a piece of a finger, a fingertip it seems.”

    It further stated that as of Monday, police had opened an investigation for a “threat of a crime or offence against an elected official.”

    According to CNN station BFMTV, it is thought that the fingertip belonged to the sender.

    The Elysee is the official home in Paris of French President Emmanuel Macron, who has held office since 2017.

    In the past year, Macron’s government has struggled to ease public anger over a controversial pension reform plan, and then following the police killing of a teenager in the outskirts of Paris.

  • Hundreds march alongside French mayor whose home was burned down

    Hundreds march alongside French mayor whose home was burned down

    Hundreds march alongside the French mayor whose home was burned down. As the nation began its second week of violent protests and riots, hundreds of people marched on Monday in solidarity of a French mayor whose home was attacked by a flaming car.

    A sizable throng in the Paris suburb of L’Ha-les-Roses came out in support of Mayor Vincent Jeanbrun, whose home was struck by the car early on Sunday.

    The event happened during a peaceful night in the nation, which had been shaken by irate rallies ever since a police officer killed a 17-year-old teenager during a traffic stop last Tuesday.

    Jeanbrun’s address was well known in the community before the attack, CNN affiliate BFMTV reported. The incident injured his wife and one of his children, Jeanbrun said earlier, calling it an assassination attempt.

    Locals and officials held up a banner at the march reading “Together for the republic!” Jeanbrun, dressed in the sash of the French tricolore, told supporters: “I have only one word: thank you.

    Democracy was attacked,” he said. “More than ever, our republic and its servants are threatened and attacked,” he added.

    In a previous statement on Sunday, the mayor said that while he was at city hall, “individuals rammed their car upon my residence before setting fire to it to burn my house, inside which my wife and my two young children slept.”

    “While trying to protect the children and escape the attackers, my wife and one of my children were injured,” he said, adding that he had “no words strong enough to describe his emotion towards the horror of this night.”

    France’s Ministry of Interior said 157 people were detained overnight into Monday morning, down from more than 700 the night before.

    Three police officers were injured, a police station was attacked and 352 public roads were set on fire, but BFMTV reported that “no major incident was reported” overnight.

    French President Emmanuel Macron will launch a procedure to “understand deeply” the cause of unrest that has been rocking France over the past week, a source present at the meeting between Macron and his top officials on Sunday told CNN.

    Macron told ministers present to continue to “do everything to establish order,” the source said.

    The wave of protests started after a police officer shot dead Nahel Merzouk, 17, during a traffic stop. The officer accused of the shooting has been charged with voluntary homicide.

    Merzouk’s grandmother appealed to protesters on Sunday, telling BFMTV: “They should not damage the schools, not break the buses, it was the moms who take the buses.

    “I’m tired,” the grandmother, identified by BMFTV as Nadia, said, adding that Nahel’s mother “doesn’t have a life anymore.”

    The teenager’s funeral took place on Saturday at a mosque in Nanterre, the Paris suburb where he was killed.

  • France riots: Grandmother of teenager slain in police stop urges restraint

    France riots: Grandmother of teenager slain in police stop urges restraint

    As French authorities prepare for a sixth night of rioting, the grandmother of the 17-year-old boy who was shot dead by a police officer in a suburb of Paris has called for an end to the violence that erupted after his murder.

    The grandmother of the protester who died, Nahel Merzouk, issued a warning to the demonstrators on Sunday, telling CNN affiliate BFMTV: “They should not damage the schools, not break the buses, it was the moms who take the buses.”

    The grandma, who BMFTV identified as Nadia, added, “I’m tired,” adding that Nahel’s mother “doesn’t have a life anymore.”

    Meanwhile, security forces will again have more than 45,000 police and gendarmes deployed across France on Sunday night following the violent public unrest, the government said.

    Many of the people detained since the protests began on Tuesday are minors, Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said Saturday, adding that the average age of the more than 2,000 detainees is 17 years old.

    The situation across France so far on Sunday has been less tense than Saturday, with only sporadic protests reported, but the violence normally kicks off after sunset, according to CNN producers in France.

    French President Emmanuel Macron will meet the country’s prime minister, interior minister and justice minister at 7 p.m. local time (1 p.m. ET) to take an update on the latest on the nationwide protests, the Elysee Palace said in a statement.

    Early Sunday morning, the mayor of a Paris suburb said his home was attacked, calling it “an assassination attempt” on his family.

    “At 1:30 a.m., while I was at the city hall like the past three nights, individuals rammed their car upon my residence before setting fire to it to burn my house, inside which my wife and my two young children slept,” said mayor Vincent Jeanbrun of L’Haÿ-les-Roses, a commune in the southern suburbs of Paris, in a statement.

    “While trying to protect the children and escape the attackers, my wife and one of my children were injured.”

    Jeanbrun said that he had “no words strong enough to describe his emotion towards the horror of this night” and thanked police and rescue services for their help.

    The Créteil prosecutor’s office has classified the incident as an “attempted murder,” prosecutor Stéphane Hardouin told reporters Sunday.

    Hardouin said the initial findings of a police investigation suggest that a flaming car “was launched to burn down the pavilion,” entering Jeanbrun’s property at around 1:30am local time.

    “Hitting a low wall, the vehicle stopped… before it could reach the veranda of the house. Only the front gate was hit, along with the family’s vehicle,” the prosecutor said in a news conference outside the mayor’s home.

    He said the mayor’s wife and two children, aged 5 and 7, fled through the back garden. While running away, the mayor’s wife hurt her shin which “appears to be broken,” according to the prosecutor.

    Hardouin also said forensic police have found a fire accelerant in a bottle of Coke. He didn’t specify which substance the accelerant was.

    “Every effort will be made to find the perpetrators and bring them to justice,” the prosecutor concluded.

    France has been rocked by a wave of protests following the death of Nahel, a 17-year-old of Algerian descent who was shot by a police officer in Nanterre earlier in the week and whose funeral took place on Saturday at a mosque in the Paris suburb amid a heavy security presence.

    The youth’s death has reignited a debate on policing in France’s marginalized communities and raised questions over whether race was a factor in his death.

    A GoFundMe page in support of the family of the police officer accused of fatally shooting the teenager had reached almost €650,000 ($710,000) on Sunday afternoon.

    The page was started by a far-right TV pundit and claims the policeman “only did his job and is now paying a hard price for it.”

    The officer has been charged with voluntary homicide and placed in preliminary detention, the prosecutor of Nanterre said earlier in the week.

    In comparison, another crowdfunding page in support of Nahel’s mother had raised over €97,000 ($105,000) at the time of writing. The page reads Nahel “leaves behind a mother torn apart by the loss of her only son. She needs our support to face the long trials that lie ahead.”

    While the French government has deployed security forces and riot police across the country, the unrest continued with another night of protests on Saturday.

    More than 700 people were detained across France overnight, according to a provisional tally from the Interior Ministry.

    The statement added 45 police officers and gendarmes had been injured overnight, while 74 buildings including 26 police and gendarmes stations were damaged and 577 vehicles set on fire.

    The previous night, more than 1,300 people were detained and 2,560 fires reported on public roads.

    Meanwhile, China has warned its citizens in France to remain vigilant after a bus carrying a Chinese tour group in the southern city of Marseille had its windows smashed, resulting in multiple minor injuries, the country’s foreign ministry said in a statement Sunday.

    China’s Consulate General in Marseille has lodged an official complaint and urged French authorities to ensure the safety of Chinese citizens and property amid the unrest.

    The ministry did not say when the incident took place or how many people were injured. It said all the tourists on the group have since left France.

  • France sends out 40,000 police over ‘clashes’ at Nanterre march

    France sends out 40,000 police over ‘clashes’ at Nanterre march

    A march held in honour of a teen died in a police shot in Paris has reportedly seen clashes between demonstrators and police.

    As the crisis worsens, over 40,000 police and gendarmes will be sent on the streets of the nation tonight.

    The first riots started on Tuesday after a 17-year-old teenager only known as Nahel M was shot and killed during a traffic stop in the Nanterre district.

    President Emmanuel Macron said the attacks on officers and burning of buildings and vehicles were ‘unjustifiable’.

    Nahel’s devastated mother Mounia said: ‘I lost a 17-year-old, I was alone with him, and they took my baby away from me.

    ‘He was still a child, he needed his mother.’

    The police officer who killed the boy has been detained on homicide charges as an investigation is carried out.

    Live Feed

    French President Emmanuel Macron told ministers during an emergency cabinet meeting that the violence seen on the streets of France last night was ‘unjustifiable’.

    His comments come a day after Macron described the shooting of Naël M by a police officer as ‘unexplainable and inexcusable’.

    Footage posted overnight appears to show a group of protesters ransacking a town hall in Lille and setting fire to chairs and documents within.

    Additional footage shows masked protesters launching fireworks at the building’s exterior.

    Good morning and welcome back to our coverage of the unrest in Paris following the shooting of a 17-year-old boy by traffic police.

    Here is a recap of last night’s developments:

    • At least 150 people have been arrested following a second night of protests as unrest over the killing of Nahel M spreads throughout France.
    • French President Emmanuel Macron and footballer Kylian Mbappe are among those to have condemned the killing as an outpuring and anger and grief sweeps the nation.
    • Over 2,000 riot police have been deployed in and around Paris as protesters launched fireworks at police and set cars ablaze in the suburb of Nanterre, where the killing took place.

    Stay with us for more updates throughout the day.

  • 24 people detained amid protests in France after 17-year-old killed by police in Nanterre

    24 people detained amid protests in France after 17-year-old killed by police in Nanterre

    Following a police shooting death of a young driver in the Nanterre district, riots have broken out in Paris.

    After the young person, identified as Nal M, reportedly violated driving laws, the incident was captured on camera on Tuesday.

    Anger broke out around the French city, and this morning there had already been 24 arrests as a result of violent protests.

    I lost a 17-year-old, I was alone with him, and they took my kid away from me, said Nal’s heartbroken mother, who wished to remain unnamed.

    ‘He was still a child, he needed his mother.’

    The police officer who killed the boy has been detained on homicide charges as an investigation is carried out.

  • Teenager sentenced to at least 12 years in prison for killing her own baby son

    Teenager sentenced to at least 12 years in prison for killing her own baby son

    A teen who killed her newborn child after giving birth on her own at her parents’ house, sentenced to at least 12 years in prison.

    On March 23, 2019, Paris Mayo, now 19, killed her son Stanley in Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire, when she was just 15.

    After a six-week trial at Worcester Crown Court, she was found guilty of murder by the jury.

    According to testimony given in court, Mayo gave birth to the child on her own while her parents were upstairs.

    He was left with a fractured skull after she is thought to have placed her foot on his head.

    Mayo ‘finished him off’ by stuffing cotton wool balls down his throat, before putting her son’s body in a bin bag and leaving it on the doorstep, then going to bed.

    She is said to have sent her brother a text message saying the bag was ‘full of sick’ and asking him to put it in the bin.

    But her mother discovered her grandson’s lifeless body the following morning when she looked inside the bloodstained bag, before calling 999, jurors heard.

    Mayo sobbed as the sentence was passed and she was led out of the dock.

    The judge, Mr Justice Garnham, told Mayo: ‘As difficult as your circumstances may have been, killing your baby son was a truly dreadful thing to do.

    ‘A human being is probably never more vulnerable that at the time of their birth,’ he said.

    The judge added: ‘You did nothing to prepare yourself for giving birth. You were frightened and traumatised by this event.

    ‘I have no doubt it was painful and overwhelming for you. It seems you did not cry out, so anxious were you not to disturb your parents upstairs.

    ‘As soon as Stanley was born, you decided he could not live and you assaulted him about the head.

    ‘How you did this is not clear, but I suspect you crushed his head, probably beneath your foot.

    ‘It certainly caused him serious damage, but that assault did not kill Stanley.

    ‘He remained alive. You decided you had to finish Stanley off by stuffing cotton wool balls into his throat.

    “As difficult as your circumstances may have been, killing your baby son was a truly dreadful thing to do.’

    Mayo tried to cover up both her pregnancy and birth – claiming she didn’t know she was expecting.

    Stanley was born full term weighing 7lb 12oz and is said to have lived for at least two hours.

    Defending Mayo, Bernard Richmond KC described her as ‘immature’ and a ‘pathetic and vulnerable individual’.

    ‘When faced with a decision she had to make, she did not face up to it.

    ‘By the time she had to, the decision she made was woefully, woefully wrong.’

    Mayo’s mother could not face seeing her daughter in the dock and her ’emotionally cruel’ father died 10 days after Stanley was born, the court heard.

    Mr Richmond added: ‘It has been said she killed him too, and that adds to the burden upon her.

    ‘This will, in every sense of the word, be a life sentence. It will be a lonely, isolating and frightening time for her.’

    Mayo must serve at least 12 years behind bars before she is eligible for parole.

    In a statement after the sentencing, the Crown Prosecution Service said Stanley’s ‘short life was filled with pain and suffering when he should have been nurtured and loved’.

    A spokesperson said: ‘The prosecution built a case based on medical evidence which proved that Paris Mayo’s actions were deliberate, she chose to hide her pregnancy, give birth alone and kill her baby, then hide his body despite accepting that she had a family who would have supported her.

    ‘Although Paris Mayo has been sentenced today, nothing can bring back poor Stanley who tragically lost his life before it even got a chance to begin.’

  • France bans short distance flights where trains suffice

    France bans short distance flights where trains suffice

    France has become the first nation to outlaw short-distance, domestic flights to locations where rail transport is an alternative.

    In 2021, lawmakers decided to eliminate train routes that could transport travellers there in under 2.5 hours.

    However, a few airlines formally requested that the European Commission examine the decision’s legality, and as a result, it has only now been effective.

    However, connecting flights using these airports won’t be impacted by the new law, which will eliminate services between Paris, Nantes, Lyon, and Bordeaux.

    The law specifies that train services serving the same route must be frequent, timely and well-connected enough to meet the needs of people who would otherwise travel by air.

    Critics have called the enforcement of the ban merely ‘symbolic’, especially as these routes have not been served by any airlines since 2020, when the pandemic devastated the travel industry.

    However, more journeys could be included in the future, with the EU having stipulated that the law should reviewed after three years.

    Mandatory Credit: Photo by LUDOVIC MARIN- POOL/SIPA/Shutterstock (13920083h) France's President Emmanuel Macron takes part in a bilateral meeting with Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on the sidelines of the G7 Leaders' Summit in Hiroshima on May 19, 2023. G7 Leader's Summit, Macron meets Trudeau, Hiroshima, Japan - 19 May 2023
    A group created by president Emmanuel Macron originally put forward a harsher ban (Picture: Shutterstock)

    The interim head of industry group Airlines for Europe, Laurent Donceel, told AFP governments should rather support ‘real and significant solutions’ to combat the effect of carbon emissions.

    He added that Brussels found ‘banning these trips will only have minimal effects’ on CO2 output.

    And yet, some environmentalists feel the measures do not go far enough, including France’s Citizens’ Convention on Climate.

    The group, which was created by French president Emmanuel Macron in 2019, had originally called for the government to scrap plane routes where train journeys under four hours existed.

    But this limit was reduced to the current one of two and a half hours, after objections from some of the regions affected and at least one airline.

    French consumer group UFC-Que Choisir, who backed the four-hour plan, said: ‘On average, the plane emits 77 times more CO2 per passenger than the train on these routes, even though the train is cheaper and the time lost is limited to 40 minutes.’

    Conversely, the UK government seems to be moving in the opposite direction – halving domestic air duty (APD) to £6.50 from April 1.

    When the then-chancellor Rishi Sunak announced the change in October 2021, he said: ‘Right now, people pay more for return flights within and between the four nations of the United Kingdom than they do when flying home from abroad.’

    Short haul flights are seen as one of the worst offenders for CO2 because take-off and landing uses the most fuel.

    But Mr Sunak previously argued that most emissions come from international, rather than domestic trips.

    French politicians are also currently debating how to reduce emissions from private jets.

  • E-scooters  outlawed in Paris by a large margin

    E-scooters outlawed in Paris by a large margin

    Considering the “dangers” that rental e-scooters pose, Parisians have decided to outlaw the ‘nuisance’ of these vehicles.

    In a “rare public consultation,” 89% of voters rejected letting the 15,000 electric scooters owned by Lime, Tier, and Dott roam about the French city.

    At the polls, voters referred to the cars as “accident-prone” and expressed worry over how frequently they were engaged in collisions.

    Electric scooters caused 3 fatalities and 459 injuries in Paris last year, a 42% increase from 2020.

    One man even claimed he ‘almost lost his baby’ after a scooter hit his child.

    He said: ‘From personal experience, my seven-week-old baby who was being carried by his mother on an enclosed passageway was hit in the middle of the road by a scooter which was going the wrong way.

    ‘We almost lost our baby.

    ‘So after this as a citizen and as a volunteer we wanted to raise awareness.’

    PARIS, FRANCE - MARCH 29: A man rides a Lime electric scooter in front of the Louvre pyramid and the Louvre museum on March 29, 2023 in Paris, France. The Mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo is organizing a local referendum on Sunday April 2, 2023 to ask Parisians if they want to keep self-service electric scooters in the capital. (Photo by Chesnot/Getty Images)
    Some 89% of voters said they wanted to ban rental e-scooters (Picture: Chesnot/Getty Images)

    Deputy mayor David Belliard, a green party politician in charge of transport in Paris, campaigned against renewing the licences of the scooter operators.

    He wrote on Twitter: ‘The scooters clutter out streets. They are stored on sidewalks, are poorly parked despite the dedicated spaces, they are dangerous obstacles, especially for seniors and people with reduced mobility.

    ‘Let’s focus our efforts instead on more accessible forms of mobility that produce less nuisance and danger.’

    He also doubted whether the scooters have ecological advantages, as un-recyclable lithium batteries have just a short life span.

    epa10553708 People ride a self-service e-scooter in Paris, France, 01 April 2023. On 02 April Paris residents will be able to vote whether to ban self-service scooters in use in the city. EPA/YOAN VALAT
    People have described the vehicles as a ‘nuisance’ (Picture: EPA)

    In June last year Linda Davis was the first pedestrian in the UK killed by an e-scooter after being hit by a 14-year-old boy.

    A 31-year-old Italian woman was killed after being hit by an e-scooter carrying two people in 2021.

    She fell and hit her head on the pavement, suffering a cardiac arrest.

    The rental e-scooters must be removed from Paris’s streets by September 1, according to Mr Belliard.

    However the scooter operators have said their younger clientele were unaware of the ballot.

    Nearly 90% of the electorate in the city also chose not to vote at all.

    In 2020, the city cut down the number of e-scooter operators to three following complaints of their disorganised deployment.

    They required the scooters’ speed be capped at around 20km per hour, and imposed designated parking areas.

    In a bid to keep running, operators promised tighter safety regulations, including ID checks to make sure all riders were over 18, and fixed license plates so police can identify traffic offenders.

  • Tinubu ‘resting’ in Paris, London

    Tinubu ‘resting’ in Paris, London

    Bola Tinubu, the incoming president of Nigeria, has traveled to France and the UK to “relax” and organize the transition process before his inauguration on May 29, 2023.

    The president-elect left the country on Tuesday, according to a statement released on Wednesday by Mr. Tinubu’s spokeswoman, Tunde Rahman.

    The president-elect, according to Mr. Rahman, would later perform the Hajj in Saudi Arabia.

    “The president-elect decided to take a break after the hectic campaign and election season to rest in Paris and London, preparatory to going to Saudi Arabia for Umrah (Lesser Hajj) and the Ramadan fasting that begins Thursday,” Mr Rahman said.

    He added that Mr Tinubu is expected back in the country “soon”.

    The president-elect’s frequent travels overseas continue to fuel speculation about his health.

    He made several unannounced trips to the UK and France before campaigns started in 2022.

    He is also facing legal battles over his victory in last month’s presidential election.

  • Argentina wins all three FIFA award categories with Messi, Scaloni, and Martinez

    Argentina wins all three FIFA award categories with Messi, Scaloni, and Martinez

    In Monday’s opulent ceremony for the Best FIFA Awards in Paris, Lionel Messi, Lionel Scaloni, and Emiliano Martinez completed a clean sweep for Argentina.

    Messi, a forward for Paris Saint-Germain, won the Best FIFA Men’s Player award, while Scaloni won Best FIFA Men’s Coach, and Martinez won Best FIFA Men’s Goalkeeper.

    The award period runs from the start of the 2021–22 season until the conclusion of the 2022 World Cup, which saw Argentina snap a 36-year championship drought.

    Martinez, who plays for Aston Villa, won the vote ahead of Thibaut Courtois and Yassine Bounou, who represent Real Madrid and Sevilla, respectively. Courtois did, however, make the FIFPro Men’s World 11 squad.

    Scaloni was next to pick up an award after seeing off competition from Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola and Real Madrid head coach Carlo Ancelotti, who won the LaLiga and Champions League double last season.

    La Albiceleste have lost just one of their 23 games since the start of last season, with their solitary loss coming in their opening Qatar 2022 group game against Saudi Arabia.

    Messi made it three from three for Argentina by claiming the top prize at the ceremony in the French capital, which started with a poignant tribute to Brazil great Pele.

    Madrid striker Karim Benzema and Messi’s PSG team-mate Kylian Mbappe had also been in the running for the award.

    Argentina’s fans also claimed the FIFA Fan Award.

    Their domination on the men’s side was not quite matched by European champions England in the women’s prizes.

    Mary Earps was named the Best FIFA Women’s Goalkeeper and Sarina Wiegman took the Best FIFA Women’s Coach award for a third time.

    But Beth Mead was pipped to the Best FIFA Women’s Player accolade by Alexia Putellas, last year’s winner.

    Other winners included Luka Lochoshvili, then of Austrian side Wolfsberger, in the FIFA Fair Play category for potentially saving the life of opponent Georg Teigl during a game after the Austria Vienna player fell unconscious mid-match.

    Polish amputee footballer Marcin Oleksy won the FIFA Puskas Award for the best goal for his perfectly executed bicycle kick for Warta Poznan against Stal Rzeszow.

    Full list of winners:

    The Best FIFA Men’s Player: Lionel Messi

    The Best FIFA Women’s Player: Alexia Putellas

    The Best FIFA Men’s Goalkeeper: Emiliano Martinez

    The Best FIFA Women’s Goalkeeper: Mary Earps

    The Best FIFA Men’s Coach: Lionel Scaloni

    The Best FIFA Women’s Coach: Sarina Wiegman

    FIFA Puskas award: Marcin Oleksy

    FIFA Fan award: Argentina fans

  • Suspect in the Paris train stabbing identified as Libyan

    Suspect in the Paris train stabbing identified as Libyan

    Reports from France say a suspected attacker who stabbed and injured six people at Paris’s Gare du Nord rail station on Wednesday has been identified as a Libyan national aged in his 20s who was due to be deported.

    Police are still investigating the motive but are not believed to be treating it as a terror related.

    Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin has praised the courage of two off-duty police officers who intervened to halt the attack.

    The suspect was shot three times and taken to hospital with serious injuries.

    Source: BBC

  • Paris shooting: Suspect admits ‘pathological’ hatred of migrants

    The man accused of a deadly attack against the Kurdish community in Paris has admitted to a “pathological” hatred of migrants, French prosecutors say.

    The 69-year-old told investigators he had planned to kill “non-European foreigners” as he embarked on his shooting spree on Friday, they say.

    The suspect was placed in psychiatric care after being questioned by police.

    He is accused of opening fire at a Kurdish cultural centre, killing three people and wounding another three.

    The man, retired train driver named as William M., told police he had become “depressed” and “suicidal” after his home was burgled in 2016, the office of the Paris prosecutor said on Sunday.

    He admitted that since then, his hatred of foreigners had “become totally pathological”, the statement added.

    It said that on Friday he first went to Saint-Denis, a high-immigration suburb in northern Paris, in order to kill “non-Europeans” – but found few people there.

    He then travelled to the Ahmet-Kaya Kurdish centre in Paris’s 10th district, where he carried out the attack.

    The man resented that community because Kurdish militiamen involved in the Syrian conflict had “taken prisoners during their fight against Islamic State instead of killing them”, the prosecutors say.

    A nearby restaurant and a hairdresser also came under fire before the man was arrested without a fight.

    He was detained on suspicion of murder, attempted murder, and acting with a racist motive.

    He has a history of weapons offences and it has emerged that he was released on bail days before the assault.

    Last year he was charged with racist violence over a sword attack at a migrant camp in the French capital.

    The shootings sparked unrest on Friday and Saturday. Demonstrators started fires in the streets, smashing car windows and clashing with police.

    The violence unfolded after Kurds had gathered peacefully in the Place de la République to pay tribute to the victims.

    In the aftermath of the shootings, Kurds have renewed calls to the French authorities for better protection. Community leaders met the Parisian police chief on Saturday.

    Friday’s attack came almost 10 years after the murder of three Kurdish women activists in the French capital – an unresolved crime.

    The community was again “afraid”, having been “traumatised” by the January 2013 murders, said a lawyer for the Kurdish democratic council in France (CDK-F).

  • Macron-Scholz: Challenging Paris summit awaits German chancellor

    German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French President Emmanuel Macron will no doubt be beaming when they meet in Paris to discuss future European cooperation.

    But, behind the smiles, both sides are aware that the EU’s central relationship is under strain like never before.

    On a variety of issues, including defence, energy, business assistance, and EU expansion, the two countries are currently pulling in opposite directions.

    And underlying everything is a fear fast becoming an obsession in Paris.

    The French concern is that the war in Ukraine has ripped up Europe’s geostrategic rule book, leaving Germany enhanced and pushing France to the Western side-lines.

    Symbolic of the rift was the cancellation of what had been until now a routine set-piece of Franco-German friendship – the regular joint meeting of the two countries cabinets.

    After a pause for Covid, these encounters were meant to resume at Fontainebleau on Wednesday. But faced with a glaring lack of common ground – as well, according to France, as the studied uninterest of several German ministers – it was agreed to call the session off.

    Mr Scholz’s arrival for a bilateral summit with the French president is an attempt to minimise the differences, but no one is deceived.

    Lamenting what it called the “glacial” state of cross-Rhine relations, Le Figaro newspaper said in an editorial that it was “the result of a profound geostrategic change – a continental shift that started a long time ago and which is destined to transform the face of Europe”.

    The essence of this shift – according to French analysts – is the awakening of the slumbering giant that is Germany and its dawning realisation that it must shift for itself in an increasingly dangerous neighborhood.

    For France, this is bad news because it casts doubt on a central assumption of the last half century: that by walking lockstep with Germany, France can not just restrain its richer and stronger neighbour, but also project its own vision of European unity.

    With almost masochistic relish, French commentators have taken to listing the ways in which Berlin has lately chosen to go its own way rather than find an accord with Paris.

    The German chancellor alongside a US F35 fighter jet earlier this year
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Earlier this year the German chancellor decided to buy F35 fighter jets

    On re-arming, Germany has shown a clear preference for US kit – like F-35 fighter jets and Patriot air-defence systems – and seems content to leave once-vaunted European defence initiatives on hold.

    Stung by criticism that it was suckered by Russia’s Vladimir Putin, Germany appears anxious to reassure its eastern neighbours by promoting itself as the European arm of Nato, rather than – as France would like it – a partner in EU defence.

    On energy, Germany is against a cap on gas prices, which France wants. It also wants France to authorise a new pipeline to carry gas – and eventually green hydrogen – from Spain. But France refuses.

    And then there is Germany’s decision to offer €200bn (£170bn) in state aid to businesses and households to get them through the energy crisis.

    For France, this will create severe economic distortions because other European countries will be unable to compete with that level of subsidy. Germans reply that France is hardly in a position to give lessons about the iniquity of state aid.

    In an article titled “The late Franco-German couple”, veteran French commentator Nicolas Baverez said France had only itself to blame for letting itself be eclipsed by Germany over the years.

    What has happened now with the Ukraine war, he said, merely revealed the imbalance that was already there. “While France is content to talk about sovereignty, Germany exercises it,” he wrote.
  • ‘Extreme evil’ – President Macron on murder of 12 year old girl

    In his first comments on the murder of a 12-year-old girl, Emmanuel Macron described it as an act of “extreme evil.”

    The French president stated that the family of the girl, Lola, deserved “the nation’s esteem and care.”

    Lola’s body was discovered in a plastic trunk outside her apartment building in Paris last Friday.

    A 24-year-old woman has been remanded in custody on suspicion of murder, rape, and acts of torture.

    The woman is an Algerian immigrant whose residence permit had expired and who was under orders to leave the country.

    Parties on the right and far-right have focused on this as a sign of a weak immigration policy.

    Members of the far right held a rally in memory of Lola on Thursday in Paris, despite pleas by her family not to politicise her death.

    In Brussels, where he was attending a European Council summit, Mr Macron told journalists: “I think all parents experience in their flesh what Lola’s parents experience.

    “I think of her parents, her brother, and her half-brother, the distress of this family which is incredibly dignified and united.

    “When we are faced with extreme evil, and we experience that it is possible in our society and that it is there, that is what is dizzying,” he added.

    A tribute is being organized in the northern town of Fouquereuil, where Lola’s family is from and where they have retreated.

    She is due to be buried on Monday in another local northern town. Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin is due to attend, invited by her parents, according to BFMTV.

    Lola disappeared last Friday after failing to make the short walk home from school in the 19th district of northeast Paris. By late evening, her body had been found inside a trunk on wheels.

     

     

  • Nigerian King of Afrobeat, Fela Kuti, honoured in Paris

    The son of Afrobeat legend Fela Kuti spoke of his father’s bravery in using “music as a weapon” ahead of an immersive exhibition opening at the Paris Philharmonic on Thursday.

    “Instead of picking up a gun, music was the only tool he had. It was a weapon to use against authority, against colonisation and corrupt African governments,” said Femi Kuti, 60, himself a hugely successful musician.

    The Paris Philharmonic is paying homage to Fela Kuti by recreating the atmosphere of his sweaty, politically-charged nightclub in Nigeria, The Shrine, that became a beacon for global stars in the 1970s including Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney.

    Kuti died from AIDS complications in 1997, but his pioneering work remains as potent as ever, frequently cited by today’s stars such as or Flea from Red Hot Chili Peppers, or Beyonce and Jay-Z who sampled his hit “Zombie” on “Homecoming Live”.

    “I’m not surprised. Great people like Miles Davis already talked about Fela,” said Femi Kuti of his father’s continued popularity. “Afrobeat was the basic element of hip-hop, it’s where hip-hop got its sauce from.”

    Fela’s politics have also remained potent.

    “When we started working on this exhibition project, the Black Lives Matter movement emerged and Fela’s fight in the 70s and 80s found resonance there,” said Alexandre Girard-Muscagorry, one of the curators of the immersive exhibition.

    Kuti was harassed throughout much of his life by the military authorities in Nigeria for his relentless criticism of their corruption and violent misrule.

    There was a particularly vicious reaction after he refused to take part in an official music festival in 1977, instead organising a parallel event that became much more popular and attracted international stars including Stevie Wonder.

    – ‘Out of Africa’ –

    Soldiers responded to his counter-festival by burning down his home and pushing his mother out of a first-floor window, causing injuries which led to her death a year later, Femi Kuti said.

    “He was a voice for the voiceless, the only opponent who was brave enough to tackle the hardcore military dictators at that time and he paid a very high price,” said Femi Kuti.

    But it was ultimately the genius of his music that made him so popular, creating something entirely new with its mix of free-jazz, soul, funk and Yoruba.

    McCartney was one of many inspired to come to The Shrine in Lagos, where he recorded his album “Band on the Run”.

    “Fela came out of Africa with this incredible sound that caught the ears of everybody,” said his son.

    “To use this music as a political weapon and message — that caught the attention of the world and especially France, maybe because of the connection to its own rebellions.”

    Source: Africanews

     

  • Kanye West makes runway debut at Balenciaga show in Paris

    Kanye West made his runway debut at Paris Fashion Week on Sunday, opening Balenciaga’s Summer 2023 collection show with a scene-stealing catwalk.

    Dressed in all-black, Ye walked the mud-filled runway in leather pants, a jacket that featured a “security” patch, and a baseball cap. According to Elle, Kanye’s children North, Chicago, Psalm and Saint West all attended the Balenciaga showcase, as did Kylie Jenner and Doja Cat, among others.

    Balenciaga’s creative director Denma explained the mud as “a metaphor for digging for truth and being down to earth.”

    “I’ve decided to no longer explain my collections and verbalise my designs, but to express a state of mind,” Demna added in the show notes.

    “Fashion is a visual art and all we need is for it to be seen through someone’s eyes. Fashion in its best case scenario should not need a story to be sold to someone. You either like it or not. The set of this show is a metaphor for digging for truth and being down to earth.”

    Watch Balenciaga’s Summer 23 collection presentation up top and check out a selection of looks from the show down below.

    Source: Complex.com

  • Two Air France pilots suspended after cockpit fistfight

    Two Air-France pilots have been suspended after engaging in a fisticuffs in the cockpit.

    The pilot and co-pilot exchanged blows as they flew an Airbus A320 from Geneva to Paris in June, Swiss news outlet La Tribune said.

    Members of the cabin crew intervened after hearing the noise. One crew member stayed in the cockpit until the flight landed safely.

    The incident did not affect the flight, the airline told La Tribune.

    The incident comes after a report published by France’s air investigation body on Tuesday said that the airline had a culture which lacked rigour when it came to safety procedures.

    Source: BBC

  • 4 injured in Paris knife attack near Charlie Hebdos former office

    Four people were injured in a knife attack Friday near the former offices of French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, the site of a 2015 terrorist attack, authorities said.

    French Prime Minister Jean Castex cut short an event in the Parisian suburb of Seine-Saint-Denis, saying that a “serious event” had taken place in the capital.

    Two of those injured were in critical condition, and the suspects involved in the attack were still on the run, a Paris police spokesperson said.

    A perimeter has been set up around the site and people should avoid the area, the spokesperson added.

    The stabbing comes amid a trail of suspects alleged to have been accomplices to a series of January 2015 terrorist attacks that began with the killing of 12 people at the Charlie Hebdo offices and ended with an attack at a kosher supermarket two days later.

    Source: CNN

  • End of Covid-19 lockdown serves up relief for Paris restaurants

    Restaurant and cafe owners in Paris cheered their chance to get back to business Monday after the government said they could once again open their dining rooms, three months after being shut to blunt the coronavirus outbreak.

    The sooner-than-expected reopening for the Paris region was announced by President Emmanuel Macron late Sunday, shortly before officials reported just nine COVID-19 deaths in the previous 24 hours — the lowest figure since March.

    “The bulk of the epidemic is behind us,” Health Minister Olivier Veran said Monday, though he cautioned that “this doesn’t mean we can stop fighting the virus.”

    Until now, restaurants in and around the capital could only serve clients on outdoor terraces, even as eateries in the rest of the country opened fully earlier this month.

    “It’s going to be a party,” Stephane Manigold, owner of four Paris restaurants, including the two-starred Maison Rostang, told AFP.

    “We were waiting for the president’s speech. Our teams are ready, and they’re eager to get back to work,” he said.

    Manigold made headlines last month after successfully suing his insurer, the French giant Axa, to pay around 70,000 euros ($79,000) in compensation for the lost business.

    Insurers have argued that most contracts do not cover nationwide administrative shutdowns, but restaurants say their livelihoods are on the line, and have called on the government to intervene.

    Even in the rest of France, where restaurants were allowed to fully reopen on May 11, owners have had to remove tables to ensure at least one metre (3.3 feet) between diners.

    Didier Chenet, head of the GNI association of independent hotel and restaurant owners, estimates the social distancing rules have cut capacity by at least half.

    “Being able to finally get back to work across all of France does bring a sigh of relief,” he said.

    But unless the government lifts the one-metre rule, he said, “a recovery will be very slow, with economic conditions that are not viable for our businesses,” he said.

    ‘Can’t open in a day’

    Foreign tourists, the key ingredient for success at Paris restaurants in particular, are also not expected to arrive in pre-COVID numbers anytime soon, even as the EU begins to tentatively open up borders within the bloc.

    With French employers still being urged to have employees work from home whenever possible, lunch crowds also remain far from what they were before the outbreak, Chenet said.

    And Manigold said that restaurants will need some time to restock and get their employees back — the French state has been paying the bulk of their salaries since the lockdown to avoid layoffs, a colossal financial effort.

    “At best we’ll open two restaurants on Wednesday, and the others next week,” he said.

    “One day maybe politicians will understand that you can’t just open a restaurant in a day. They could have avoided the abruptness,” he said.

    Macron said Sunday that the government had mobilised 500 billion euros to ease the coronavirus blow to the economy, including more than six billion euros in state-backed loans to restaurants, hotels and cafes.

    He also announced that all students below high school grades must return to class next Monday, a relief for parents who have been juggling work and school from home.

    Hygiene rules will be relaxed, with teachers now able to welcome more than 15 children per class, Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer said Monday.

    Source: france24.com

  • Paris police chief defends forces against ‘racism’ claims

    The police chief of Paris defended his forces Tuesday against accusations of brutality and racism as anger over alleged police violence mounts in France as in the United States.

    Following a string of complaints of alleged heavy-handedness, Didier Lallement wrote a letter sympathising with the “pain” officers must feel “faced with accusations of violence and racism, repeated endlessly by social networks and certain activist groups”.

    The Paris police force “is not violent, nor racist: it acts within the framework of the right to liberty for all,” he insisted in an email to the city’s 27,500 law enforcers.

    Lallement refused permission for a rally outside a Paris court later Tuesday to call for justice for a young black man, Adama Traore, who died in police custody in 2016.

    As thousands across the United States protested the police killing last week of George Floyd, an unarmed black man, Lallement expressed concern that the “tone” of the call to rally in Paris could expose a “sensitive site” to risk.

    He also cited a nationwide ban on public gatherings of more than 10 people designed to hamper coronavirus spread, according to the Paris police department.

    Organisers have vowed to press ahead with the protest under the banner “Truth for Adama”.

    Traore, 24 was apprehended in a house where he hid after leading police on a 15-minute chase in 2016.

    He lost consciousness in their vehicle and died at a nearby police station. He was still handcuffed when paramedics arrived.

    – ‘Truth for Adama’ –

    One of the three arresting officers told investigators that Traore had been pinned down with their combined bodyweight after his arrest.

    The case sparked violent protests in the Paris suburbs and became a rallying cry for police brutality in France, which young, black men say is often targeted at them.

    Last Friday, French medical experts exonerated the three police officers, dismissing a medical report commissioned by the young man’s family that said he had died of asphyxiation.

    It was the third official report to clear the officers.

    Several French officers have been investigated for brutality against members of the public at long-running “yellow vests” anti-government rallies, and more recent anti-pension reform strikes.

    Scores of protesters were maimed by rubber bullets or stun grenades, some losing an eye or a hand.

    On January 3 this year, a 42-year-old man suffocated to death after being pinned face down to the ground during an arrest in Paris.

    – ‘Republican bulwark’ –

    Last week, a 14-year-old was badly injured in one eye during a police operation in Bondy, one of Paris’s less wealthy northern suburbs, sparking protests.

    Lallement insisted Tuesday that any officer who erred would be appropriately punished.

    “But I will not accept that individual actions throw into question the republican bulwark that we are against delinquency and those who dream of chaos and anarchy,” he wrote.

    The police department in a tweet Tuesday also denounced the “unacceptable, systematic questioning of police intervening in difficult contexts with hostile crowds.”

    Source: france24.com

  • Police clash with residents in Paris suburbs amid lockdown

    Police fought running battles overnight in Paris’s low-income northern suburbs with residents alleging heavy-handedness by officers enforcing France’s strict coronavirus lockdown.

    Residents burned trash and cars and shot fireworks at police, who responded with rubber bullets and tear gas in the suburbs of Villeneuve-la-Garenne and Aulnay-sous-Bois, witnesses and police said on Monday.

    The tensions were ignited in the early hours of Saturday when a motorcyclist was injured during a police check in Villeneuve-la-Garenne, prompting about 50 angry bystanders to gather.

    A police statement said the group targeted officers with “projectiles” in a near two-hour standoff.

    The motorcyclist, 30, was hospitalised with a broken leg and had to undergo surgery after he had crashed into the open door of a police car.

    Residents allege the door was opened deliberately so that the rider would smash into it.

    The man will lodge a complaint against the officers, his family and a lawyer told AFP, while prosecutors have opened an investigation.

    By Monday morning, calm had returned to Villeneuve-la-Garenne after a second night of riots marked by suburban fires and explosions, an AFP journalist observed.

    The trouble had also spread to nearby Aulnay-sous-Bois, where police claimed they were “ambushed” by residents in a district of dense, high-rise social housing of mainly immigrant occupants who claim they are regularly the victims of harsh police treatment.

    Police said they were targeted by residents using fireworks as projectiles. Four were arrested.

    ‘Confinement and tensions’

    After the motorcyclist was injured on Saturday, rights group SOS Racisme issued a statement calling on authorities to shed full light on the incident, and urging police restraint “in this time of confinement and tensions”.

    Earlier this month, prosecutors opened an investigation into the death in detention of a 33-year-old man arrested for allegedly violating the home confinement measures imposed by the government to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

    Police said the man resisted arrest. According to his sister, he had suffered from schizophrenia.

    Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said Sunday police had carried out 13.5 million checks since the lockdown started on March 17, with people allowed outside only for essential purposes, and then with a self-certified letter explaining their reasons for leaving their home.

    More than 800,000 people were written up for violations.

    Several complaints of brutality were lodged against French police during recent months of pension reform protests and “yellow vest” anti-government rallies.

    Source: France24

  • Paris bans daytime jogging in bid to slow spread of coronavirus

    Paris officials said on Tuesday they would ban lone daytime jogging as people continue to flout anti-Coronavirus lockdown rules, after France recorded its highest daily death toll.

    Under nationwide confinement rules that came into force on March 17, people can leave their homes only for essential purposes, which had included a solo walk or run within one kilometre of their homes.

    But as sunny days arrived over the weekend, large groups of Parisians were seen running, walking and congregating in groups, even as police issued fines for lockdown violations and hospitals struggled to cope with the influx of patients.

    On Tuesday, as France entered its fourth week of lockdown, Paris toughened the confinement rules, announcing a ban on individual outdoor sports between the hours of 10:00 am and 07:00 pm starting Wednesday.

    The move came just after Health Minister Olivier Veran announced Monday a record daily coronavirus death toll of 833 people in 24 hours.

    He said 478 people were admitted to intensive care in the period, a higher figure than in previous days.

    ‘Far from over’

    “It is not over. Far from that. The path is long. The figures that I have announced show this,” the minister said, urging people to “stay at home and continue this confinement effort”.

    Interior Minister Christophe Castaner had already urged regional officials to toughen restrictions locally.

    Announcing the new measures for Paris, Mayor Anne Hidalgo and the capital’s police chief Didier Lallement said in a statement that “every excursion avoided aids the fight against the epidemic”.

    On Monday, the mayor of Sceaux, a commune south of Paris, issued a decree obliging all residents over the age of 10 to cover their mouth and nose when leaving the home starting on Wednesday.

    Those who do not have surgical masks must wear a homemade alternative or tie a scarf or bandanna around their face, otherwise they could be fined 38 euros ($41).

    In a radio interview earlier on Tuesday, Hidalgo said she was not making masks obligatory although she did encourage everyone to cover their faces and noses.

    The French government requisitioned all medical masks earlier in the outbreak for doctors and nurses.

    Source: AFP

  • Paris waiter ‘shot dead over slow sandwich service’

    A waiter in Paris has been shot dead by a customer who was reportedly angry because his sandwich wasn’t prepared quickly enough.

    Police say a murder investigation has been launched after the incident on Friday evening in the eastern Noisy-le-Grand suburb.

    The suspect fled the scene and has not been caught.

    Read:Seven dead in Paris building blaze Fire service

    Ambulance crews tried to save the 28-year-old waiter, who had been shot in the shoulder, but he died at the scene.

    His colleagues told police that the customer had lost his temper at the pizza and sandwich shop because of the length of time it had taken to prepare his meal.

    The killing has stunned local residents and shopkeepers.

    Read:Notre-Dame area sealed off in Paris as workers prepare to remove toxic lead

    “It is sad,” one 29-year-old woman told French media. “It’s a quiet restaurant, without any problems. It just opened a few months ago.”

    Some residents, however, said there had been an upsurge of crime in the area with an increase of drug-dealing and drunkenness on the streets.

    Source: bbc.com