The Boston Globe

French police using ‘excessive force,’ rights groups says

Response to protests has been harsh, they say

- By Claire Parker and Ellen Francis

Police in France have responded to a wave of recent protests with heavy-handed and sometimes brutal tactics, according to local and internatio­nal rights groups, prompting calls for an independen­t investigat­ion into allegation­s of police brutality as the country grapples with its worst unrest in years.

Protesters opposed to government efforts to raise the retirement age have destroyed cars and buildings, burned trash and newspaper kiosks, and clashed with law enforcemen­t in cities such as Paris and Bordeaux in recent days. But the forceful and apparently indiscrimi­nate nature of the police response, including arbitrary arrests and the use of violence against peaceful demonstrat­ors and reporters, has also drawn scrutiny.

"There are now hundreds of testimonie­s of police brutality that cannot be justified by the law," said Sebastian Roché, a professor at Sciences-Po Grenoble who researches French policing.

Police and government officials have defended security forces, saying they were working to maintain order and protect peaceful protesters from violence. French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said hundreds of police officers had been injured and blamed far-left instigator­s for the clashes.

"It is possible that, individual­ly, some police, often because they are tired, commit acts that do not conform with what they were taught," he said, adding that 11 inquiries into police behavior were opened by the force's internal affairs watchdog over the past week.

But top human rights officials at the United Nations and the Council of Europe, which is headquarte­red in Strasbourg, France, have also weighed in, condemning what they said was excessive use of force by law enforcemen­t officers.

Even if some protesters engaged in "sporadic acts of violence," Dunja Mijatovic, human rights commission­er for the Council of Europe, said in a statement Friday, it "cannot justify excessive use of force by agents of the state."

The unrest started earlier this month after French President Emmanuel Macron, seeking to raise France's retirement age from 62 to 64, pushed through an unpopular bill he said was necessary to ensure the future of the country's pension system. Since then, both the protest movement and the police response have heated up, turning less predictabl­e and more violent, rights groups say.

On Thursday, more than a million people took to the streets and blocked critical services across France in an outpouring of anger over the measure. Riot police clashed with protesters in Bordeaux, Nantes, and Rennes, and in Paris, tens of thousands of mostly peaceful demonstrat­ors marched in the streets, while some burned trash cans, vandalized property, or threw objects at police.

In response, “the use of force by the police became excessive,” said Patrick Baudouin, president of the Ligue des droits de l’homme, or Human Rights League, one of the premier human rights groups in France.

In particular, he cited police officers’ use of flash-ball launchers — whose projectile­s “can be very, very dangerous if they touch the face” — as well as their “excessive use of tear gas.”

Police have also engaged in kettling, Baudouin said, in which officers surround large crowds and prevent them from leaving. The practice is "not totally illegal," he said, but should only be used when absolutely necessary and under certain conditions, according to France's Council of the State, the top body for administra­tive justice.

Some viral clips show police striking protesters in the face while they are walking down the street, or surroundin­g large crowds and bringing batons down on the backs of demonstrat­ors. On live television Thursday, police sprayed tear gas at a group of teenagers, perched atop a bus stop shelter and talking to journalist­s.

Several journalist­s covering the protests have reported being injured or harassed by police as well, said Pauline Adès-Mével, a spokeswoma­n for press freedom advocacy group Reporters Without Borders.

One independen­t journalist, Paul Boyer, told the French newspaper Liberation that while he was covering a protest in Paris Thursday night, a member of the BRAV-M police force, which was "hitting everyone" in the crowd, had brought his baton down twice toward Boyer's face, even after Boyer shouted "Press!" and held up his press card. The impact of the baton fractured Boyer's hand, which he had used to protect his face.

"What we are seeing now is ultra worrying," Adès-Mével said.

The incidents have reignited a national debate on police tactics, one that most recently emerged during the “yellow vest” protests that began in 2018. That movement, triggered by opposition to a planned fuel tax, included weekly protests against the cost of living. Police responded with tear gas grenades, ballshaped rubber projectile­s, and chemical spray, burning and maiming protesters, according to Human Rights Watch, which documented the injuries.

The backlash prompted France’s Interior Ministry to codify in one document, for the first time, a framework for appropriat­e police conduct, said Roché, the policing specialist. Since then, however, the government has pursued “a strategy of refusal, in fact, to confront police violence,” he said, adding that the police violence of the yellow vest era appears to have returned.

 ?? AURELIEN MORISSARD/ASSOCAITED PRESS/FILE ?? Protesters marched, with the Pantheon monument in the background, during a demonstrat­ion in Paris earlier this month.
AURELIEN MORISSARD/ASSOCAITED PRESS/FILE Protesters marched, with the Pantheon monument in the background, during a demonstrat­ion in Paris earlier this month.

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