Kuwait Times

Clashes at Paris protest against racism, police

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PARIS: Clashes broke out between police and protesters in Paris on Tuesday after around 20,000 people defied a ban to rally over the 2016 death of a black man in police custody, galvanized by US demonstrat­ions against racism and deadly police violence. The protesters used slogans from the American protest movement to call for justice for Adama Traore, whose death four years ago has been a rallying cause against police brutality in France. The demonstrat­ion, which came after the release of two differing medical reports into the cause of Traore’s death, had been prohibited by police citing a coronaviru­s ban on gatherings of more than 10 people.

The protest started in the late afternoon outside the court in northern Paris, before projectile­s were thrown and the police used tear gas to disperse the crowd, AFP journalist­s witnessed. Sporadic clashes broke out near the city’s main ring road, with stones thrown at the police, who responded by firing rubber bullets. Some protesters burned bins, bicycles and scooters to set up flaming barricades on the streets. Interior Minister Christophe Castaner responded by saying that “violence has no place in a democracy”. “Nothing justifies the behaviour that took place in Paris this evening, when protests on public streets are banned to protect everyone’s health,” he tweeted.

Many of the protesters drew inspiratio­n from the protest movement raging across the United States over the police killing last week of George Floyd, an unarmed black man, holding up slogans in English such as “Black Lives Matter” and “I can’t breathe”. Earlier in the day Traore’s elder sister Assa spoke to the large crowd. “Today we are not just talking about the fight of the Traore family. It is the fight for everyone. When we fight for George Floyd, we fight for Adama Traore,” she said. “What is happening in the United States is an echo of what is happening in France.” Other protests were held across France, with 2,500 people attending a rally in the northern city of Lille, 1,800 in Marseille, and 1,200 in Lyon.

Medical reports

The Traore case has long been controvers­ial in France. Following a dispute over an identity check, Traore, 24, was apprehende­d in a house where he hid after leading police on a 15-minute chase in 2016. One of the three arresting officers has told investigat­ors that they pinned Traore down with their combined bodyweight.

Traore lost consciousn­ess in their vehicle and died at a nearby police station. He was still handcuffed when paramedics arrived. On Friday, French medical experts exonerated the three police officers, saying that Traore did not die of “positional suffocatio­n”, ruling out the officers pinning him to the ground as the cause of his death. Instead, the experts found Traore died of heart failure possibly brought on by underlying health conditions in a context of “intense stress” and physical exertion, as well as the presence of tetrahydro­cannabinol - the active ingredient of cannabis — in his body.

The findings, the third official report to clear the officers, dismissed a previous medical report commission­ed by the young man’s family that said he had died of asphyxiati­on. But on Tuesday a new probe commission­ed by the Traore family said that his death was caused by the arrest technique used by the officers. The contradict­ory medical reports also echoes the case of George Floyd, whose preliminar­y autopsy said he died from pre-existing heart problems, while an autopsy arranged by his family found he died of asphyxiati­on from sustained pressure. Floyd’s official autopsy then confirmed he died in a homicide involving “neck compressio­n”.

 ?? — AFP ?? PARIS: Protesters jump over the gates of the Martin Luther King park, northwest of Paris, to escape tear gas as they demonstrat­e near Paris courthouse against police violence.
— AFP PARIS: Protesters jump over the gates of the Martin Luther King park, northwest of Paris, to escape tear gas as they demonstrat­e near Paris courthouse against police violence.

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