Police violence in France has a long and controversial history, dating back to the colonial era and the Algerian War of Independence. The recent killing of Nahel M., a 17-year-old boy of Algerian and Moroccan descent, by a police officer in Nanterre, a suburb of Paris, has sparked widespread protests and riots across the country, as well as calls for justice and accountability.
Nahel’s death is not an isolated incident, but rather the latest in a series of cases that have exposed the deep-rooted racism and brutality within France’s law enforcement agencies, especially towards Black people and immigrants of Arab origin. Here are some of the most notorious examples of police violence in France in the past decades:
- The Paris massacre of 1961: On October 17, 1961, during the Algerian War, thousands of Algerian protesters marched peacefully in Paris against a curfew imposed on them by the French authorities. They were met with brutal repression by the police, led by Maurice Papon, a former Vichy official who had collaborated with the Nazis. The police beat, shot, drowned and tortured hundreds of protesters, throwing many of them into the Seine river. The exact number of victims is still disputed, but estimates range from 40 to 300. The massacre was covered up by the government and the media for decades, until it was finally acknowledged and condemned by President François Hollande in 2012.
- The death of Malik Oussekine: On December 6, 1986, Malik Oussekine, a 22-year-old student of Algerian descent, was chased and beaten to death by two police officers on motorcycles in Paris. He was not involved in any protest or riot, but was simply returning home from a nightclub. His death sparked outrage and demonstrations across France, leading to the resignation of Interior Minister Charles Pasqua and the abolition of the controversial anti-riot police unit known as the “voltigeurs”.