
Inès, who was stabbed to death on Monday, had filed six complaints against her former partner, an Afghan refugee, for violence and harassment, all to no avail. Her mother described him as a “dangerous” and “extremist” man who “did not want to integrate” and “intended to return to Afghanistan.”
Inès worked for an organization that helps migrants, particularly with administrative procedures. It was in this capacity that she met the accused man. A “dangerous” and “extremist” man who “didn’t want to integrate” and “intended to return to Afghanistan.” “He said the Taliban were heroes.”
When Inès met the man who would become the prime suspect in her murder, the young woman seemed oblivious to the warnings from her loved ones. Angélique had repeatedly alerted her to her partner’s unstable personality. “I didn’t like him when I saw him,” confides her mother, who describes the man as “a big macho” with “the mentality of his country.” Despite everything, the young woman stayed for two years: “I think she was in denial; she thought she could change him,” she continues.
Note – Google Translate
