
Prison attacks in France: Drug traffickers' involvement confirmed
The involvement of drug traffickers has been confirmed in the investigation into attacks on prisons and penitentiary staff in France. Twenty-one suspects were presented on Friday to investigating judges tasked with organized crime in Paris.
Pretrial detention has been requested for these individuals, including two minors and seven already incarcerated, according to a joint statement from the National Anti-Terrorism Prosecutor's Office (PNAT) and the National Jurisdiction for Combating Organized Crime (JUNALCO), now solely responsible for the investigations. "Among the accused" is "the individual believed to be the creator of the first Telegram account titled DDPF (Defense of French Prisoners) and author of the claim text broadcast on this channel, criticizing prison conditions," they highlight. Already detained, convicted for common law offenses, he is to be tried soon for acts related to drug-related crime close to the DZ Mafia in Marseille, France's second-largest city.
The "DDPF" group, then completely unknown, had posted videos and threats on this encrypted messaging platform, which subsequently deleted them and closed the channel.
The investigations "highlighted a similar operational method, deployed repeatedly: following an action order given by the instigator of the +DDPF+ movement on a Telegram channel, offers for actions were broadcast and relayed on social media, executors were recruited and carried out the acts, in exchange for significant remuneration," the statement relates. "This operational method corresponds to that now typically employed by criminal organizations to carry out missions on their behalf," the text adds.
In total, 30 people, including four minors, were apprehended between Monday and Wednesday during a large-scale operation throughout France. Seven police custody cases were lifted without prosecution at this stage. An adult and a minor are referred Friday before an investigating judge in Lyon, as the acts they are suspected of committing could not be linked to the main investigation.
300 investigators
The judicial investigation, opened Friday by JUNALCO for, among other things, criminal conspiracy with a view to preparing crimes and misdemeanors and attempted murder in organized gangs, focuses on about fifteen actions carried out against prisons and penitentiary staff since April 13. That day, in Agen (southwest), the "DDPF" tag appeared for the first time near seven cars set on fire in the parking lot of the National School of Penitentiary Administration (Enap). This was followed by a series of car fires of penitentiary staff members throughout France, firework mortar shots on prisons, and even Kalashnikov shots as in Toulon (southeast). The investigation also focuses on firearm shots and the throwing of two Molotov cocktails targeting on April 21 a housing area in Villefontaine near Lyon (central-east) where penitentiary staff reside, not far from the Saint-Quentin-Fallavier prison.
As early as April 15, the PNAT took charge of the investigation due to "the nature of these acts, the chosen targets, and the coordinated nature of actions committed on multiple points across the territory, as well as their aim to seriously disrupt public order through intimidation, as claimed on social media by a group called +DDPF+." However, following the operation, "it does not appear that these coordinated actions stem from a terrorist enterprise whose sole purpose would have been to seriously disturb public order through intimidation or terror," the PNAT and JUNALCO elaborate. "No violent radical ideology, no foreign interference, avenues fully explored, could be characterized," they continue. "However, the investigations have definitively placed these actions within extremely organized crime," according to the statement.
Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin had attributed the attacks to organized crime from the outset, while the Parliament definitively adopted on Tuesday a bill aimed at strengthening the fight against drug traffickers. "More than 300 investigators throughout the national territory" were mobilized during the investigations.

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Nahar Net
18 hours ago
- Nahar Net
Suspect faces US hate charges after fire attack on Jewish protest
by Naharnet Newsdesk 03 June 2025, 11:06 A man posing as a gardener to get close to a group in Boulder holding their weekly demonstration for the release of Israeli hostages in Gaza planned to kill them all with Molotov cocktails, authorities said Monday. But he had second thoughts and only threw two out of the 18 incendiary devices he had into the group of about 20 people, yelling "Free Palestine" and accidentally burning himself, police said. Twelve people were injured in the Sunday attack. He had gas in a backpack sprayer but told investigators he didn't spray it on anyone but himself "because he had planned on dying." "He said he had to do it, he should do it, and he would not forgive himself if he did not do it," police wrote in an affidavit. He didn't carry out his full plan "because he got scared and had never hurt anyone before." Mohamed Sabry Soliman, 45, planned the attack for more than a year and specifically targeted what he described as a "Zionist group," authorities said in court papers charging him with a federal hate crime. The suspect's first name also was spelled Mohammed in some court documents. "When he was interviewed about the attack, he said he wanted them all to die, he had no regrets and he would go back and do it again," Acting U.S. Attorney J. Bishop Grewell for the District of Colorado said during a press conference Monday. Federal and state prosecutors filed separate criminal cases against Soliman, charging him with a hate crime and attempted murder, respectively. He faces additional state charges related to the incendiary devices, and more charges are possible in federal court, where the Justice Department will seek a grand jury indictment. During a state court hearing Monday, Soliman appeared briefly via a video link from the Boulder County Jail wearing an orange jumpsuit. Another court hearing is set for Thursday. Soliman is being held on a $10 million, cash-only bond, prosecutors said. An FBI affidavit says Soliman confessed to the attack after being taken into custody Sunday and told the police he was driven by a desire "to kill all Zionist people," a reference to the movement to establish and protect a Jewish state in Israel. Soliman's attorney, public defender Kathryn Herold, declined to comment after the hearing. Soliman was living in the U.S. illegally after entering the country in August 2022 on a B2 visa that expired in February 2023, Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a post on the social platform X. The burst of violence at the popular Pearl Street pedestrian mall in downtown Boulder unfolded against the backdrop of the Israel-Hamas war that continues to inflame global tensions and has contributed to a spike in antisemitic violence in the United States. The attack happened on the beginning of the Jewish holiday of Shavuot and barely a week after a man who also yelled "Free Palestine" was charged with fatally shooting two Israeli embassy staffers outside a Jewish museum in Washington. Six victims hospitalized The victims who were wounded range in age from 52 to 88, and the injuries spanned from serious to minor, officials said. All four of the latest victims had what police described as minor injuries. Six of the injured were taken to hospitals, and four have since been released, said Miri Kornfeld, a Denver-based organizer connected to the group. She said the clothing of one of those who remains hospitalized caught on fire. The volunteer group called Run For Their Lives was concluding their weekly demonstration when video from the scene shows a witness shouting, "He's right there. He's throwing Molotov cocktails." A police officer with his gun drawn advances on a bare-chested suspect who is holding containers in each hand. Witness Alex Osante of San Diego said he was across the pedestrian mall when he heard the crash of a bottle breaking and a "boom" followed by people yelling and screaming. In video of the scene captured by Osante, people could be seen pouring water on a woman lying on the ground who Osante said had caught on fire during the attack. Molotov cocktails found Soliman said he dressed up like gardener with an orange vest in order to get as close to the group as possible, police wrote. Osante said that after the suspect threw the two incendiary devices, apparently catching himself on fire as he threw the second, he took off his shirt and what appeared to be a bulletproof vest before the police arrived. The man dropped to the ground and was arrested without any apparent resistance in the video Osante filmed. District Attorney Michael Dougherty said 16 unused Molotov cocktails were recovered by law enforcement. The devices were made up of glass wine carafe bottles or jars with clear liquid and red rags hanging out of the them, the FBI said. Soliman told investigators he constructed the devices after doing research on YouTube and buying the ingredients. "He stated that he had been planning the attack for a year and was waiting until after his daughter graduated to conduct the attack," the affidavit says. Soliman also told investigators he took a concealed carry class and tried to buy a gun but was denied because he is not a legal U.S. citizen. Suspect hospitalized after attack Authorities said they believe Soliman acted alone. He was also injured and taken to a hospital. Authorities did not elaborate on the nature of his injuries, but a booking photo showed him with a large bandage over one ear. In video and photos shot right after the attack by a woman at the gathering, Soliman can be seen pacing without his shirt on with what appears to be burns down one of his arms. He and a small group of people around him are screaming at each other, with some witnesses filming him. Soliman, who was born in Egypt, moved to Colorado Springs three years ago, where he lived with his wife and five kids, according to state court documents. He previously spent 17 years living in Kuwait. McLaughlin said Soliman filed for asylum in September 2022 and was granted a work authorization in March 2023 that had expired. DHS did not immediately respond to requests for additional information. Shameka Pruiett knew Soliman and his wife as kindly neighbors with three young kids and two teenagers who'd play with Pruiett's kids. Another neighbor, Kierra Johnson, said she could often hear shouting at night from his apartment and once called police because of the screaming and yelling. On Sunday, Pruiett saw law enforcement vehicles waiting on the street throughout the day until the evening, when they spoke through a megaphone telling anyone in Soliman's home to come out. Nobody came out and it did not appear anyone was inside, said Pruiett.


Ya Libnan
25-05-2025
- Ya Libnan
Zelensky urges Trump not to be silent after Russia launched war's largest air attack on Ukraine, killing at least 12 people
An explosion of a drone lights up the sky over the city during a Russian drone strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine May 24, 2025. President Trump has so far refused to impose new sanctions on Russia despite his threats to do so .REUTERS/Gleb Garanich By Max Hunder . Summary KYIV- Russian forces launched a barrage of 367 drones and missiles at Ukrainian cities overnight, including the capital Kyiv, in the largest aerial attack of the war so far, killing at least 12 people and injuring dozens more, officials said. The dead included three children in the northern region of Zhytomyr, local officials there said. The Reuters Tariff Watch newsletter is your daily guide to the latest global trade and tariff news. Sign up here. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy called on the United States, which has taken a softer public line on Russia and its leader, Vladimir Putin, since President Donald Trump took office, to speak out. 'The silence of America, the silence of others in the world only encourages Putin,' he wrote on Telegram. 'Every such terrorist Russian strike is reason enough for new sanctions against Russia.' It was the largest attack of the war in terms of weapons fired, although other strikes have killed more people. Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said 12 people had been killed and 60 more wounded. Earlier death tolls given separately by regional authorities and rescuers had put the number of dead at 13. 'This was a combined, ruthless strike aimed at civilians. The enemy once again showed that its goal is fear and death,' he wrote on Telegram. The assault comes as Ukraine and Russia prepared to conduct the third and final day of a prisoner swap in which both sides will exchange a total of 1000 people each. CEASEFIRE EFFORTS Ukraine and its European allies have sought to push Moscow into signing a 30-day ceasefire as a first step to negotiating an end to the three-year war. Their efforts suffered a blow earlier this week when Trump declined to place further sanctions on Moscow for not agreeing to an immediate pause in fighting, as Kyiv had wanted. Ukraine's air force said Russia had launched 298 drones and 69 missiles in its overnight assault, although it said it was able to down 266 drones and 45 missiles. Damage extended to a string of regional centres, including Ukraine's second-largest city, Kharkiv, as well as Mykolaiv in the south and Ternopil in the west. In Kyiv, Tymur Tkachenko, head of the city's military administration, said 11 people were injured in drone strikes. No deaths were reported in the capital, although four were killed in the region around the city, according to officials. This was the second large aerial attack in two days. On Friday evening, Russia launched dozens of drones and ballistic missiles at Kyiv in waves that continued through the night. In northeastern Ukraine, Kharkiv Mayor Ihor Terekhov said early on Sunday that drones hit three city districts and injured three people. Blasts shattered windows in high-rise apartment blocks. Drone strikes killed a 77-year-old man and injured five people in the southern city of Mykolaiv, the regional governor said. He published a picture of a residential apartment block with a large hole from an explosion and rubble scattered over the ground. In the western region of Khmelnytskyi, many hundreds of kilometres away from the frontlines of fighting, four people were killed and five others wounded, according to the governor. 'Without pressure, nothing will change and Russia and its allies will only build up forces for such murders in Western countries,' the Ukrainian president's chief of staff Andriy Yermak wrote on Telegram. 'Moscow will fight as long as it has the ability to produce weapons.' Russia's Defence Ministry reported that its air defence units had intercepted or destroyed 95 Ukrainian drones over a four-hour period. The Mayor of Moscow, Sergei Sobyanin, said 12 Ukrainian drones had been intercepted on their way to the capital. (Reuters)


MTV Lebanon
17-05-2025
- MTV Lebanon
Several killed after Russia strikes civilian bus in Ukraine
A Russian drone struck a bus with civilians in Ukraine's Sumy region, killing at least nine people and injuring four others, the head of the military administration of the region in Ukraine's northeast said on Saturday. The attack came hours after Russia and Ukraine held their first direct peace talks in three years. "Passengers have been injured," Ihor Tkachenko, head of Sumy's military administration, said on the Telegram messaging app. "Medics and rescuers have been urgently sent to the scene.'" "This is not just another shelling – it is a cynical war crime," Ukraine's National Police said in a post on the Telegram messaging app. Ihor Tkachenko, head of Sumy's military administration, said on Telegram that a rescue operation was under way. Ukraine's police posted photos showing the aftermath of the strike in Sumy's Bilopillia city, around 10 kilometres (6 miles) from the front line and border with Russia. Neither Reuters nor the Associated Press could independently verify the Ukrainian report and there was no comment from Moscow. A period of mourning has been declared in Bilopillia from Saturday through Monday, with local community chief Yurii Zarko calling the day of the attack 'Black Saturday'. The local media outlet Suspilne said the passengers on the bus were being evacuated from Bilopillia when the strike occurred. Authorities are working to identify the victims, most of them elderly women. The injured were taken to a hospital in Sumy, the regional capital. Three people were reported to be in serious condition. It wasn't immediately clear how the strike would affect peace efforts. Saturday's attack follows a meeting of Russian and Ukrainian officials in Turkey on Friday, which failed to broker a temporary ceasefire. It was the first direct dialogue between the two sides since the early months of the war that Russia launched in February 2022. After the talks, Kyiv said it was seeking an "unconditional ceasefire" to pause the conflict, which has destroyed large swathes of Ukraine and displaced millions of people. But Moscow has consistently rebuffed those calls and the only concrete agreement appeared to be a deal to exchange 1,000 prisoners each. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he discussed the talks with US President Donald Trump and the leaders of France, Germany, the UK and Poland. In a post on X from a European leadership meeting in Albania, he urged 'tough sanctions' against Moscow if it rejects 'a full and unconditional ceasefire and an end to killings'. 'Pressure on Russia must be maintained until Russia is ready to end the war,' Zelensky said on X, posting a photo of the leaders during the call, the second for the group since May 10. Both sides deny targeting civilians in their attacks, but thousands have died in the conflict, the vast majority of them Ukrainians.