Deutsche Welle (English edition)

France: Police face charges over beating of Black music producer

Four officers are reported to have been charged in connection with the beating of music producer Michel Zecler. Fresh police brutality accusation­s arose after arrests were made at security law protests over the weekend.

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Four officers were reported to have been charged on Monday over the arrest of Black music producer Michel Zecler, who was shown being beaten for several minutes in video footage.

An examining magistrate in Paris charged three officers with "willful violence by a person holding public authority" and "forgery," a judicial source told news agency AFP.

Video footage showed how music producer Zecler was repeatedly beaten by three officers and subjected to racial abuse as he tried to enter his music studio earlier this month.

A fourth officer, suspected of having thrown a tear gas grenade into the basement of the building where the attack took place, was charged with "willful violence."

Prosecutor­s requested pretrial detention for the three suspected of carrying out the beating, with a judicial review for the fourth.

The officers face charges of intentiona­l violence, racial abuse and posting a false police statement.

A lawyer for some of the officers, Laurent-Franck Lienard, challenged their continued detention, telling French news channel BFM the trio believed the force used was unavoidabl­e.

The lawyer's remarks contradict­ed comments made by Paris' top prosecutor, Remy Heitz, who said that the officers admitted to using excessive force during the arrest.

"As they were being interrogat­ed several times, they changed their version and finally admitted that they used disproport­ionally much force to arrest the music producer," DW correspond­ent Lisa Louis said, citing remarks made by prosecutor­s.

France's interior ministry said protests across the country on Saturday over alleged police brutality and a draft security law had resulted in 81 arrests in what protest organizers said was a turnout of as many as 500,000 people nationwide.

Protests had taken place in Strasbourg, Marseille, Lyon and

Rennes, with 76 officers reported injured, including 23 in Paris.

Photojourn­alist hurt, trapped

Among those hurt during Saturday's protests was awardwinni­ng Syrian photojourn­alist Ameer al-Halbi. The bandaged journalist on Sunday accused police of trapping him and at least four other photograph­ers for two hours, wedged between squads and demonstrat­ors despite al-Halbi's head wounds.

"Images of Syria surged back into my head … I was aged 15 when I found myself blocked in a demonstrat­ion in Aleppo, wounded by two bullets in my hand," al-Halbi told AFP, adding that he and his colleagues were "clearly recognizab­le" as members of the press.

An internal administra­tive inquiry had been opened into how al-Halbi had been hurt, a police source told AFP.

Reporters Without Borders' secretary- general, Christophe Deloire, tweeted that al-Halbi had been wounded by "a police baton" at the Place de la Bastille.

The recent protests in France focus on a bill — passed by the National Assembly but awaiting Senate approval — that would criminaliz­e the publicatio­n of images of on-duty officers with intent to harm their "physical or psychologi­cal integrity."

Commentato­rs say images of Zecler's beating — first published by the Loopsider news site on Thursday — might never have gone public if the contentiou­s Article 24 of the bill became law.

On Friday, President Emmanuel Macron said images of Zecler being beaten "shame us" and asked France's government to devise anti-discrimina­tion proposals.

This also followed police forcibly evacuating a Paris migrant camp on Monday.

ipj,rc/dr (AFP, Reuters, dpa)

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 ??  ?? Syrian photojourn­alist Ameer al-Halbi sustained head injuries in a Paris protest against police brutality
Syrian photojourn­alist Ameer al-Halbi sustained head injuries in a Paris protest against police brutality

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