logo
French anti-terror prosecutor investigates killing of Tunisian national

French anti-terror prosecutor investigates killing of Tunisian national

Straits Times2 days ago

PARIS - The French anti-terrorism prosecutor's office has opened an investigation into whether the killing of a Tunisian national in southern France was a racially motivated crime "related to a terrorist undertaking".
The Tunisian man, who has not been officially identified but is thought be around 35, was shot dead by a neighbour late on Saturday in the town of Puget-sur-Argens, the local prosecutor said. A 25-year-old Turkish national was also shot in the hand and taken to hospital after the incident.
The anti-terrorism prosecutor's office told Reuters on Monday that it was investigating charges of racially motivated assassination and attempted assassination related to a terrorist undertaking, as well as charges of involvement in a terrorist criminal group planning one or several violent crimes.
The prosecutor for the southern commune of Draguignan said on Sunday that the suspect was a 53-year-old man who practises shooting as a sport and who published what it said was hateful and racist content on his social media account before and after Saturday's killing.
The killing follows the fatal stabbing of Aboubakar Cisse, a 22-year-old man from Mali, in a mosque in the southern French town of La Grand-Combe last month amid what official figures suggest is rising racism in France.
Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau condemned Saturday's shooting, saying on x that "racism must be severely punished." Political opponents have said his stances on immigration and Islam have contributed to rising levels of hate crime.
French police recorded an 11% rise in racist, xenophobic or anti-religious crimes last year, according to official data published in March.
France has the largest Muslim population in Europe, numbering more than 6 million and making up about 10% of the country's population.
Some French politicians, including President Emmanuel Macron, have criticised what they describe as Islamist separatism in a way that rights groups have said stigmatises Muslims and amounts to discrimination. REUTERS
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Why this hatred': French town reels over killing of Tunisian man
‘Why this hatred': French town reels over killing of Tunisian man

Straits Times

time20 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

‘Why this hatred': French town reels over killing of Tunisian man

A portrait and a call for a tribute march, outside the hair salon where Hichem Miraoui used to work before he was shot dead by his neighbour. PHOTO: AFP PUGET-SUR-ARGENS, France -The murder of a Tunisian man by his French neighbour in southern France, which is being investigated as a terror crime, has horrified the local community and raised alarm over rising racism in the country. Tributes poured in from shocked neighbours and friends mourning the murder of Mr Hichem Miraoui, with more than a dozen bouquets placed outside the barbershop where he worked in the quiet town of Puget-sur-Argens. 'I don't understand why he was killed. Why all this hatred?' said Ms Sylvia Elvasorre, a 65-year-old pensioner who lives next to the hair salon, tears in her eyes. Ms Marwouen Gharssalli, 43, echoed her disbelief, saying his friend was generous and willing to lend a helping hand. 'He even cut hair for free when people couldn't pay... he regularly used to cut my son's hair,' said Ms Gharssalli, a welder in the southern town. A card signed by fellow shopkeepers said the death of Mr Miraoui – remembered as hard-working and warm – would 'leave a void'. Christophe B, a French national, shot and killed Mr Miraoui, 46, on May 31 evening before injuring another neighbour, a Turkish national. The suspect, born in 1971, was arrested after his partner alerted police. He posted racist videos on social media both before and after the attack, according to regional prosecutor Pierre Couttenier. A silent march is planned in Puget-sur-Argens on June 1 to affirm the city's 'absolute rejection of hatred and our commitment to respect, tolerance and fraternity', said a town hall statement. 'Complete impunity' The shooting followed the murder of a Malian man in a mosque in April, also in southern France, while the burning of a Quran near Lyon at the weekend has further fuelled concerns over rising anti-Muslim attacks in the country. 'People are stunned that a racist crime like this could happen. This kind of thing is not part of Puget's culture,' said Mr Paul Boudoube, the town's mayor. Mr Miraoui was in a video call with family planning for the major Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, when he was shot. Flowers led outside the hair salon where Hichem Miraoui used to work before he was shot dead by his neighbour. PHOTO: AFP 'He was joking with our sick mother when I heard him grunt and the call ended,' said Ms Hanen Miraoui, the victim's sister. According to French daily Le Parisien, the suspect in Mr Miraoui's murder said he 'swore allegiance to the French flag' and called on the French to 'shoot' people of foreign origin in one of his videos posted on social media. Anti-terrorism prosecutors have taken over the investigation into the case, the first such racist attack linked to the far right to be dealt with as 'terrorism' since their office was set up in 2019. 'It means that investigative resources will be devoted to analysing the political motives behind this act and how this person became radicalised,' said the legal head of the anti-discrimination group SOS Racisme, Ms Zelie Heran, who praised the referral. Following the murder, political and religious leaders have sounded the alarm over growing anti-Muslim acts in France, which increased by 72 per cent in the first quarter, with 79 recorded cases, according to interior ministry figures. Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau, who is taking an increasingly hard line on immigration issues, has faced accusations of not being firm enough against such crimes and even fuelling a racist climate. But he said on June 3 that the killing of Mr Miraoui was 'clearly a racist crime', 'probably also anti-Muslim' and 'perhaps also a terrorist crime'. France is home to the largest Muslim community in the European Union, as well as the largest Jewish population outside Israel and the United States. PHOTO: AFP Mr Chems-Eddine Hafiz, the imam of the Grand Mosque of Paris, called on French President Emmanuel Macron to speak out. 'It is time to hold accountable the promoters of this hatred who, in political and media circles, act with complete impunity and incite extremely serious acts,' said Mr Hafiz. 'Remind people of the reality that we are citizens of this country,' said Mr Hafiz. France is home to the largest Muslim community in the European Union, as well as the largest Jewish population outside Israel and the United States. There has also been a rise in reported attacks against members of France's Jewish community since Palestinian militant group Hamas attacked Israel on Oct 7, 2023 and the Israeli military responded with a devastating military offensive on the Gaza Strip. France's Holocaust memorial and three Paris synagogues and a restaurant were vandalised with paint on May 31. AFP Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Farmers in EU raise alarm over Mercosur, Ukraine trade deals
Farmers in EU raise alarm over Mercosur, Ukraine trade deals

Straits Times

time31 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Farmers in EU raise alarm over Mercosur, Ukraine trade deals

A farmer holds grains in his hands as other members of Spanish farming associations hold cardboard cutouts of U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin as they protest to demand the government to limit Ukraine's grain imports, outside the Agriculture Ministry in Madrid, Spain, June 4, 2025. REUTERS/Susana Vera A man checks grains he picked up from the ground during a protest by Spanish farming associations to demand the government to limit Ukraine's grain imports, outside the Agriculture Ministry in Madrid, Spain, June 4, 2025. REUTERS/Susana Vera Members of Spanish farming associations hold cardboard cutouts of U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin as they protest to demand the government to limit Ukraine's grain imports, outside the Agriculture Ministry in Madrid, Spain, June 4, 2025. REUTERS/Susana Vera REFILE - CORRECTING DATE FROM \"JUNE 3\" TO \"JUNE 4\". PARIS/MADRID - French and Spanish farmers warned on Wednesday that a flood of imports under planned European Union trade agreements with South American bloc Mercosur and Ukraine risked severely undermining European agriculture. The concerns come ahead of Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's official visit to France and the expiry on Thursday of a free trade deal with Ukraine, which is expected to shift to import quotas this summer. Lula said on Tuesday he would discuss the EU-Mercosur deal with President Emmanuel Macron, a strong critic of the agreement in its current form, which was finalised in December but still needs approval from member states. In a meeting with members of parliament, French farmers' groups urged Macron to rally enough partners to form a blocking minority against the Mercosur deal, which they say would be devastating for the beef, poultry and sugar industries and compromise the EU's ambitions in terms of food sovereignty. "It would be a real tragedy for our industry," Alain Carre, head of French sugar industry group AIBS said. "We're sounding the alarm." French farmers held nationwide protests last year over low incomes, rising costs, and competition from cheap imports, particularly from Ukraine and Mercosur countries, demanding fairer trade terms and lighter regulation. "Our demands (for an EU-Mercosur agreement) are simple: reciprocity of rules, traceability abroad and much clearer labelling," Jean-Michel Schaeffer, head of French poultry industry group Anvol, said. Meanwhile, a few hundred farmers protested in Madrid against cheap grain imports from Ukraine and other countries, saying prices have fallen below production costs. Spanish farmers are likely to lose 1 billion euros ($1.1 billion) this year, said Javier Fatas, a leader of farmers union COAG from the Aragon region in northeastern Spain. "This happens because of trade deals signed by Spain and the EU as part of geopolitics, bringing us prices too low to sustain our farms," Fatas said. He warned that genetically modified grains from Mercosur also created unfair competition, echoing French farmers' concerns. Wednesday's protest was peaceful, but only the beginning, he added. "Bad times are coming." Here are the main EU import quotas for Mercosur products in the agreement: Product Quota Volume Tariff / Note Beef 99,000 t 7.5% tariff Poultry 180,000 t 0%, phased in over 5 years Pork 25,000 t 83 euros/tonne Sugar 190,000 t 0% Corn (Maize) 1,000,000 t 0%, phased in Industrial 450,000 t 0% Ethanol Fuel Ethanol 200,000 t One-third of MFN tariff Rice 60,000 t 0% Honey 45,000 t 0% REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Antisemitic incidents in Germany almost double in 2024, report says
Antisemitic incidents in Germany almost double in 2024, report says

Straits Times

time35 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Antisemitic incidents in Germany almost double in 2024, report says

FILE PHOTO: People protest outside Berlin's Humboldt University in support of Israel and against antisemitism, in Berlin, Germany, October 5, 2024. REUTERS/Christian Mang/File Photo Antisemitic incidents in Germany almost double in 2024, report says BERLIN - The number of antisemitic incidents in Germany almost doubled last year, at a time of continued war in Gaza between Israel and Hamas, the semi-official German body that tracks antisemitism reported on Wednesday. The Federal Research and Information Point for Antisemitism (RIAS) said it had registered 8,627 incidents of violence, vandalism and threats against Jews in Germany last year, almost twice the 4,886 recorded in 2023, and far ahead of 2020's 1,957. "Objectively, the risk of being persecuted as a Jew in Germany has increased since October 7, 2023," Benjamin Steinitz, head of RIAS, told a news briefing on the report, referring to the start of the Gaza war. "But debates about what counts as an expression of antisemitism seem to take up more space than empathy for the victims." The largest category of incidents reported by RIAS - about 25% of the total - fell within the category of "anti-Israeli antisemitism", which covers criticisms of Israeli policy that some regard as legitimate political expression in a democracy. In a report published last month, Jewish activist group Diaspora Alliance questioned what it said was RIAS methodology equating such criticism with antisemitism. Alliance activist Jossi Bartal said RIAS' approach "delegitimises criticism of the Israeli state, marking every expression of Palestinian identity as suspect", alluding to Israeli policy towards Palestinians in occupied territories. Steinitz told the briefing in response to questions that the Diaspora Alliance report distorted RIAS' work. "I think the aim of publishing the report now was to present our work as somehow controversial and discredit the experiences of victims." Antisemitic violence, vandalism and threats have surged in recent years, with far-right Germans responsible for around three times as many incidents as Islamists, RIAS reported. For Germany, tracking such incidents and countering antisemitism is central to its post-war project of atoning for the Nazi-era Holocaust of Europe's Jews. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store