
Syringe attacks during France's music street festival leave 145 jabbed
The outdoor festival took place all over France last Saturday, with authorities reporting "unprecedented crowds" in Paris.
The Interior Ministry said that 145 people nationwide had reported being stabbed with needles, with Paris police reporting 13 cases in the capital. Upwards of a dozen women and underaged girls have been hospitalised.
'The ministry is taking this very seriously,' a spokeswoman from the Interior Ministry stated. "Some victims were taken to hospital for toxicological tests and the investigation is ongoing," the ministry added.
Officials have yet to say if these were cases of needle spiking with date-rape drugs such as Rohypnol or GHB, but the drugs rendered victims confused and vulnerable to sexual assault.
Ahead of the festival, influencers like Abrège Soeur warned that calls had been made on social media for women to be targeted with syringes.
Paris police chief Laurent Nuñez todl French broadcaster CNews: 'These are extremely serious incidents,' calling the online calls to inject women 'completely idiotic.'
Two men were also arrested in the centre of the north-eastern city of Metz on suspicion of syringe attacks.
The mayor of Metz, François Grosdidier, took to social media to address the situation: 'On social networks, a call for syringe assaults has been launched during the Music Festivals in major cities. It happened in two other cities in Moselle and all over France… 17 young girls (ages 14-20) were victimized in #Metz.'
Grosdidier continued: 'A description of a syringe attacker was shared with the Urban Supervision Center (CSU) to help locate him on video footage, as well as with the municipal and national police. Municipal police officers identified him on Rue Serpenoise, arrested him, and handed him over to the National Police and judicial authorities. I hope the investigation – especially examining his mobile phone – will help identify other attackers.'
Police said more than 370 people were detained nationwide during the festival on various charges. A reported fourteen participants in the festivities were seriously injured, including a 17-year-old who was hospitalised after being found sitting on the street with stab wounds to the lower abdomen.
Thirteen members of law enforcement were also injured.
This isn't the first time that syringe attacks targeting women have taken place.
Similar cases took place in France in June 2022. Several suspects around France were detained for allegedly pricking people with a needle in nightclubs or at concerts.
At the time, the French Ministry of the Interior confirmed to Euronews that 80 per cent of the targets were young women. French police tallied over 400 reports at the time, saying that the motive of the jabs was unclear.
In Spain, the number of women reporting being jabbed with medical needles while at nightclubs or parties rose to 60 in 2022, according to the country's interior minister.
There were similar incidents in the UK in 2021, prompting the British Parliament to publish a report in April 2022 about spiking cases.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Euronews
7 hours ago
- Euronews
Explained: French streamer's death sheds light on 'trash streaming'
Content warning: This article includes mentions of violence, suicide and extreme acts that some readers might find disturbing. It's a tragedy that has exposed a lesser-known side of internet culture. French streamer Raphaël Graven, known online as Jean Pormanove, died on Monday in southern France during a live broadcast on the Kick streaming platform. Graven, 46, was one of France's first ever streamers and had about half a million followers on his various channels. Over the years, he had become known for engaging in degrading acts on screen, such as strangulation and ingestion of toxic chemicals, sometimes at the request and with the financial support of live viewers. Graven appeared alongside three other people – his regular streaming partners – throughout the 12-day long broadcast that led up to his death. Footage shared on social media showed two of these men, known as Naruto and Safine, physically abusing and berating him. France's digital affairs and artificial intelligence minister Clara Chappaz described the incident as 'absolute horror'. French police opened an investigation into Graven's death, and an autopsy should be performed today. Rapper Drake and US streamer Adin Ross, who are both financially linked to Kick's parent company, have offered to pay for Graven's funeral. This episode of horrific violence sheds light on a subgenre of live online content that is driven by streamers who engage in humiliating and sometimes dangerous behaviour. The disturbing horrors of trash streaming Graven's case is reminiscent of trash streaming, a phenomenon that originated in the 2010s and became popular in Russia and Poland. Trash streamers commit degrading, violent and sometimes fatal acts against themselves or others. In 2021, a Russian streamer was sentenced to six years in prison for the death of his 28-year-old pregnant girlfriend during a December 2020 live stream. The man beat his partner, causing traumatic brain injury, and locked her out of their home while she was wearing only her underwear, the Moscow Times reported. Paramedics pronounced the young woman dead while cameras were still rolling. Russia later adopted a federal law banning trash streams. The audience is a key participant in trash streaming. 'Viewers are often curious about what extremes trash streamers are capable of going to,' said researchers Barbara Cyrek and Malwina Popiołek in a 2022 article. 'The greater the availability of tools allowing to influence the shape of the broadcast, the potentially greater the chances for more extreme content.' On platforms like Kick or even YouTube, viewers can donate money to incentivise content creators to go further. The first episode of the seventh Black Mirror series, which aired in April, takes inspiration from this phenomenon. The main character, played by Chris O'Dowd, joins a fictional trash streaming site named "Dum Dummies", where he performs humiliating tasks in exchange for money to support his ill wife. The episode ends as he is about to commit suicide while on stream. In Raphaël Graven's case, the donation counter at the end of his fatal 298 hours-long live suggested him and his partners had raised more than €36,000. Lack of regulation Content creators who engage in practices related to trash streaming have found safe havens in loosely regulated platforms like Kick. The Australian live streaming service was created in 2022 by the founders of gambling company Stake. Kick's community guidelines officially prohibit 'content that depicts or incites abhorrent violence including significant harm, suffering or death,' as well as 'displays of serious and significant self-harm.' However, the platform grew its brand and user base thanks to more lenient moderation policies compared to rivals like Twitch. In December, French media Mediapart had already revealed that Raphaël Graven was the victim of a yearslong 'business of humiliation.' The story prompted prosecutors to open an investigation, with Graven's partners Naruto and Safine being briefly taken into custody. Kick temporarily suspended his channel before it was allowed to broadcast again. Mediapart's revelations prompted no political or legislative follow-up at the time. The platform has banned all streamers involved in the video of Graven's death and is reviewing its French content, it said on Wednesday. However, Kick did not say whether it would update its community guidelines, which currently state that 'live streaming, by its nature, is unpredictable' and that 'it's impossible to foresee every outcome.'


France 24
15 hours ago
- France 24
French researcher in Russian jail faces new espionage charge
A French researcher who is serving three years in a Russian prison is now being investigated for espionage, according to a court filing seen by AFP on Wednesday. Documents showed that Laurent Vinatier is facing a new court hearing on August 25 on espionage charges, which carry a sentence of up to 20 years in prison. Vinatier, who worked for a Swiss conflict mediation organisation, is one of a number of Westerners who have been arrested in Russia since diplomatic tensions soared over Ukraine. The French government has demanded that Moscow release him and accused Russia of taking Westerners hostage. He was found guilty in October last year of gathering information on the Russian military and of violating its "foreign agent" law, as he did not register as one. The "foreign agent" law has been widely used against domestic Kremlin critics. Vinatier worked as an adviser with the Geneva-based Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue, and is a veteran researcher on Russia and other post-Soviet countries. He said in court that in his work he always tried to "present Russia's interests in international relations".


Euronews
a day ago
- Euronews
US-led coalition in Syria captures senior IS group commander
US-led coalition forces captured a senior Islamic State commander believed to be the group's leader in a pre-dawn helicopter raid Wednesday near Syria's Turkish border, killing one Iraqi citizen during the operation. The operation took place in Atmeh, a town near the Turkish border, and an IS group commander alleged to be Abu Hafs al-Qurashi was taken away. At the same time, an Iraqi citizen was killed, the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. The observatory said the man captured had a French-speaking woman with him, and it is not known if she was taken by US forces or Syrian security, who later cordoned off the area. The US military has not responded to requests from the media for comment, and it is not immediately clear if the man captured is IS' main leader. Two years ago, the IS group announced that a man called Abu Hafs al-Hashemi al-Qurashi had been named as its new leader after Turkish authorities killed his predecessor. The IS jihadist group broke away from al-Qaeda more than a decade ago. It attracted supporters from around the world after it declared a self-proclaimed "caliphate" in 2014 in large parts of Syria and Iraq. Despite its defeat in Iraq in 2017 and in Syria two years later, the IS group's militants still carry out deadly attacks in both countries and elsewhere. All previous IS leaders have adopted Al-Qurashi as part of their surname, implying a connection to Quraish, the tribe to which Islam's Prophet Muhammad belonged. The IS group claims its leaders hail from the tribe, and al-Qurashi is used as a nom de guerre -- all part of the terror organisation's propaganda, as it is largely invented and its handful of leaders are unrelated, according to reports. Its first leader, the self-proclaimed emir and caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, did not take on the Al-Qurashi name, despite claiming he hailed from the tribe without providing evidence.