
Teenage student stabs teaching assistant to death at French school
The teenager was being held at the gendarmerie of Nogent while being questioned, the Haute-Marne Prefecture said.
A police officer helping with the bag checks at the Françoise Dolto School in Nogent was slightly injured during the arrest, the gendarme service said.
French President Emmanuel Macron condemned the "senseless wave of violence" after the fatal stabbing.
'While she was looking after our children in Nogent, an educational assistant lost her life, a victim of senseless violence,' French President Emmanuel Macron said in a post on X.
'The nation is in mourning and the government is mobilised to reduce crime.'
Education Minister Élisabeth Borne was on her way to Nogent "to support the entire school community and the police".
"I commend the composure and dedication of those who acted to subdue the attacker and protect the students and staff," she said on X.
The 15-year-old suspect did not have a criminal record. The teaching assistant received several knife wounds just as classes were starting, and the alleged attacker, who was overpowered by gendarmes, "appears to be a student at the school", education officials said.
'Immense pain'
In March, French police started random searches for knives and other weapons concealed in bags at and around schools.
The teaching assistant was "simply doing her job by welcoming students at the entrance to the school", said Elisabeth Allain-Moreno, secretary general of the SE-UNSA teachers' union, expressing "immense pain".
Allain-Moreno said that the attack "shows that nothing can ever be completely secure and that it is prevention that needs to be focused on".
Jean-Rémi Girard, president of the National Union of Secondary Schools, added: "It's impossible to be more vigilant 24 hours a day.
"We can't say that every student is a danger or a threat, otherwise we'd never get out of bed in the morning."
French far-right leader Marine Le Pen denounced what she called the "normalisation of extreme violence, encouraged by the apathy of the authorities".
"Not a week goes by without a tragedy striking a school," Le Pen said on X.
"The French people have had enough and are waiting for a firm, uncompromising and determined political response to the scourge of juvenile violence," she added.
In April, after a fatal attack at a school in Nantes, the education ministry reported that 958 random bag checks in schools had led to the seizure of 94 knives.
After that knife attack, which left one person dead and three injured, Prime Minister François Bayrou called for "more intensive checks around and inside schools".
Hashtags

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


Euronews
15 minutes ago
- Euronews
France probes death of streamer over concerns of 'horrifying' violence
An investigation has been launched in France into the death of a 46-year-old man who livestreamed videos of himself being subjected to abuse and violence. Raphael Graven — who went by Jean Pormanove or JP online — was known for streaming extreme challenges and had built a following of more than 1 million people across various social media platforms, including the live-streaming service Kick. French prosecutors said he died on Monday at a property in the village of Contes, near Nice, according to local media. Graven had reportedly been subjected to violence and sleep deprivation for 10 days during his streaming. Footage shared on social media showed several men choking and beating Graven. In one video, the men noticed that Graven appeared lifeless while lying on a mattress and quickly cut the broadcast. The videos could not be independently verified by Euronews. Clara Chappaz, France's digital affairs and artificial intelligence (AI) minister, said that "the death of Jean Pormanove and the violence he suffered are an absolute horror". "Jean Pormanove was humiliated and mistreated for months live on the Kick platform. A judicial investigation is underway," she wrote on X. Sarah El Haïry, France's high commissioner for children, said his death was "horrifying". "Platforms have an immense responsibility in regulating online content so that our children are not exposed to violent content. I call on parents to be extremely vigilant", she wrote on X. Kick said it was "urgently reviewing" circumstances around the streamer's death. "We are deeply saddened by the loss of Jeanpormanove and extend our condolences to his family, friends and community," a spokeperson said. "Kick's community guidelines are designed to protect creators, and we remain committed to upholding these standards across our platform." Many social media users drew parallels between Pormanove's death and the British dystopian anthology show Black Mirror. In a recent episode, a man harms himself on a livestreaming platform in return for payment from viewers in order to fund life-saving treatment for his ill wife.

LeMonde
3 hours ago
- LeMonde
French streamer dies live on air after months of humiliation and abuse
The story is reminiscent of some of the most chilling episodes from the British dystopian tech series Black Mirror. A 46-year-old French influencer, Raphaël Graven, known as Jean Pormanove in his livestreams, died Monday, August 18, in southeast France during a livestream on the Kick platform that had been running for more than 298 hours. According to footage shared on social media, the other participants in the livestream noticed Graven had died while they were lying down and cut the broadcast at that moment. The Nice prosecutor's office opened an investigation into the cause of death, handled by the local judicial police. An autopsy was ordered. At this stage, the exact cause of death is unknown. On the Kick channel named after his streamer pseudonym, which had half a million subscribers, Graven most often appeared with three other influencers: Owen Cenazandotti, known as Naruto, Safine Hamadi, known as Safine, and a man identified as "Coudoux."


Local France
4 hours ago
- Local France
France probes live streaming death of man
The man – real name Raphael Graven, but known online as 'Jean Pormanove' or 'JP' – had built a following by putting on live internet shows in which he was abused or humiliated. Prosecutors in the city of Nice said he died on Monday in the nearby village of Contes. Internet users said that the video – screened live on an Australian platform called Kick but widely shared afterwards – showed Graven lying immobile under a bed cover as one of two men in the room with him threw a plastic water bottle in his direction. The Nice prosecutors' office said it had launched an investigation to determine the cause of death, and had ordered an autopsy. Police in Nice have already for the past eight months been probing alleged 'deliberate violent acts' against 'vulnerable people' that have been ending up as videos on the internet. Advertisement That investigation, started in December, sprang from a report by French outlet Mediapart revealing the existence of such videos, followed by thousands of viewers, especially on the Kick platform. Asked about that investigation, Kick declined to provide any information, citing its policy of confidentiality. The platform is seen as having less stringent user terms than those of its rival, the better-known Twitch streaming service.