The Guardian (USA)

French PM accused of recycling far-right ideas in youth violence crackdown

- Angelique Chrisafis in Paris

The French prime minister, Gabriel Attal, is facing criticism for his proposed crackdown on teenage violence in and around schools, after he said some teenagers in France were “addicted to violence”, just as the government seeks to reclaim ground on security issues from the far right before European elections.

In his speech in Viry-Châtillon, a town south of Paris where a 15-year-old boy was beaten and killed this month by a group of young people, Attal said the state needed “a real surge of authority”. Attal suggested some offenders aged under 18 could be treated as adults in the legal system. He also proposed sending disruptive children far away from their neighbourh­oods to boarding schools, and will visit a boarding school next week to promote the measure.

Attal said: “There are twice as many adolescent­s involved in assault cases, four times more in drug traffickin­g, and seven times more in armed robberies than in the general population.” He claimed there were also increased “Islamist” influences among school-age children.

Attal said disruptive behaviour could be marked on final school exam grades, which would count in the university applicatio­ns system. He also plans to expand compulsory school hours to 8am-6pm every weekday for children at middle school, initially in “priority education zones” in lowincome areas but later to other schools in France.

Lawyers, magistrate­s and teachers’ unions, as well as politician­s on the left, criticised the measures, which come after Emmanuel Macron urged the government to find solutions to what he called the emergence of daily “ultraviole­nce” among young people.

Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally is far ahead in the European election polls and has accused the government of being lax on security issues.

Attal suggested that it was time to question the “excuse” of being a minor in the legal system and said he may open a debate on the legal approach to under-18s in France. This could mean some children, in exceptiona­l cases, being denied the right to special judicial treatment for being under 18. He suggested 16-year-olds could be made to immediatel­y appear in court after violations, fast-tracked “like adults”. In France, the age of majority is 18, in accordance with the UN convention on the rights of the child.

The French branch of Unicef said Attal’s proposed measures would threaten the “fundamenta­l principles”

of children’s rights in France, in which an educationa­l approach was more important than repressive measures against them.

Adeline Hazan, head of Unicef

France, said: “These measures do not seem sufficient­ly anchored in prevention and support for families, profession­als and young perpetrato­rs of violence. Some measures risk worsening inequaliti­es from a young age for children and vulnerable young people.”

The French magistrate­s’ union, the Syndicat de la Magistratu­re, described the measures as “extremely worrying”, saying they would lead to a justice system that “stigmatise­s”.

Politician­s on the left said Attal was recycling the ideas of the far right.

Sophie Vénétitay, secretary general of the teachers’ union Snes-FSU, said the measures were “simplistic” and “irresponsi­ble” and that schools needed staffing, funding and long-term support from the government, not soundbites.

Officials said on Friday that a 14year-old girl had died of a heart attack in Souffelwey­ersheim, eastern France, after her school locked down this week to protect itself from a knife attacker. A man had stabbed two girls aged seven and 11 outside a nearby primary school.

 ?? Sipa/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Gabriel Attal was speaking in ViryChâtil­lon, where a boy was beaten and killed this month. Photograph: Mathilde Mazars/
Sipa/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Gabriel Attal was speaking in ViryChâtil­lon, where a boy was beaten and killed this month. Photograph: Mathilde Mazars/

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