France: Suspect in Gare Du Nord Stabbing Of Six Named As Mohamed Amine M.

Note Google Translate – “According to the first elements of the investigation, the defendant would have shouted “Allah Akbar” during the attack . An element that the investigators of the criminal brigade are verifying, by cross-checking the hearing of witnesses and victims. According to information from Europe 1, the suspect, on whom no paper was found, says he is Algerian . He says his name is Mohamed Amine M. , a name unknown to the police and he was born, according to his statements, on April 14, 1991. He would therefore be 31 years old. Investigators are trying to cross-check his statements.”


We now return you to the English language …

Gare du Nord: Six people injured in stabbing attack

Six people have been injured with one in a critical condition after a stabbing at Paris’s international Gare du Nord station early on Wednesday.

Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said a man was stopped by two off-duty police officers who were returning home from a shift.

He said the suspected attacker was shot three times and taken to hospital with serious injuries.

Authorities are trying to establish if there was a motive for the attack.

Pro-Tip – start with asking why the stabby Mohammedan shouted “Allahu Akbar”

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Brigitte Macron backed an ‘erect phallus with golden balls’ as the new spire for Notre Dame cathedral, France’s former culture minister claims

Macron proposed an ‘erect phallus with golden balls’ as the new spire for the Notre Dame cathedral in Paris, the former culture minister has claimed.

Roselyne Bachelot, 76, recounted in her memoirs how she was shocked when the First Lady presented her risqué plans for the iconic landmark over lunch.

After fire ravaged the iconic gothic cathedral in 2019, Emmanuel Macron held an international competition to redesign the spire and roof.

Could be France is getting what it deserves.

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French Bakeries Under Threat of Massive Closures

The surge in energy prices linked to the war in Ukraine is beginning to have a serious impact in France, with victims whose downfall is hitting public opinion hard, both practically and symbolically. French bakers are closing down, one after the other, because they cannot pay their soaring electricity bills. An estimated 33,000 artisan bakers are now threatened with closures.

For several weeks, headlines in the regional press have reported on the closure of bakeries throughout the country—in dramatic circumstances and with deep human tragedies as a result. Many craftsmen made their last batch of bread for New Year’s Day before closing their doors for good. Some were businesses that had been established in small towns for several decades, prosperous and well-established family businesses that could no longer cope with the rising costs of production. 


How France’s prized nuclear sector stalled in Europe’s hour of need

France should be in a strong position as Europe reels from the energy crisis, drawing on the renowned nuclear industry that supplies the lion’s share of its power. But France’s nuclear sector has been going through a tricky time, as a significant proportion of its reactors have had to close for maintenance. Analysts blame a mixture of bad luck and the consequences of a political deal from a decade ago.

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France’s nuclear headache leaves Macron on brink of rationing electricity

The damp and warmer-than-normal weather that afflicted much of France last week was a disappointment for skiers hoping to see in the new year in the Alps. But it has brought welcome relief to those in charge of keeping the country’s lights on.

The threat of power cuts has been looming over France — curious considering that it is normally a significant exporter of electricity, thanks to its 56 nuclear reactors, by far the largest number of Europe.

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France Enjoys Quiet New Year’s Eve – Only 690 Vehicles Car-B-Q’d

New Year’s Eve: a gendarmerie barracks attacked, a children’s hostel set on fire, a retired couple and families saved from the flames… (Update: 690 vehicles burned, 490 arrests, no “notable incident” for Darmanin )

“Darmanin” is Gérald Darmanin Minister of The Interior

Below, While @GDarmanin is at winter sports in Mayotte, the city of Bordeaux fell into the hands of scum for this night of December 31

Below, Amiens: Clashes between law enforcement and scum last night in Macron’s hometown – No major incidents for the government. This kind of scene is completely normal.

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Paris Riots: Migration and Mistrust

Recent events in France remind us of the plot of the recently released French film Athena, which tells the story of how the murder of a young Algerian-French boy by the police sparks a civil war in France. Our discussion begins with a devastating spoiler—I highly recommend, therefore, that anyone who has not watched Athena do so before proceeding, as it is, in my estimation, one of the best films to come out in recent memory.

This is not a review, however, and the spoiler I am leading up to—revealed in the very last scene—is key to the present discussion: For after the violence and tragedy of the plot have run their course, we learn that it was not police officers who murdered the lad, but some criminals belonging to a far-right group disguised as police, precisely in order to coax immigrant communities into rioting against security forces and so initiate a civil war.

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French police detain man over World Cup hit-and-run in Montpellier

French police have detained a suspect in the hit-and-run death of a teenage boy during celebrations of France’s win over Morocco in the World Cup semi-finals, prosecutors said on Tuesday.

A man was detained on Tuesday near the southern city of Perpignan, prosecutors said.

The 14-year-old boy, Aymen, was killed on 15 December in the Paillade district, one of the poorer areas of the southern city of Montpellier.

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Ankara summons French envoy over ‘anti-Turkey propaganda’ after attack on Paris Kurds

Turkey on Monday summoned France’s ambassador over “anti-Turkey propaganda” that it alleged French officials did little to stop following the killing of three Kurds in Paris.

Friday’s shooting was followed by days of protests by Kurdish groups and their supporters in the French capital.

Some of the protesters waved flags of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) – designated as a terrorist organisation by Turkey and its Western allies.

Others held banners with slogans accusing Turkey of being a killer state and connected to the shooting.

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Suspect in Paris shooting ‘had pathological hatred of foreigners’

The French man detained over the killing of three Kurdish people in Paris last week has told investigators he had a “pathological” hatred of foreigners, the city’s prosecutor said on Sunday.

The 69-year-old man was arrested on Friday after shooting dead two men and a woman in a Kurdish cultural centre and nearby Kurdish cafe in the 10th district of Paris, which the French president, Emmanuel Macron, described as a “vile” attack on the Kurds of France.

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Suspect in Deadly Paris Shooting Transferred to Psychiatric Unit as Protests Enter 2nd Day

Police and protesters clashed in Paris for a second day after a man on Dec. 23 opened fire at a Kurdish cultural centre and killed three people. A 69-year-old suspect shooter, who was wounded and detained, had since been removed from custody for health reasons.

The Paris prosecutor’s office said in an update on Dec. 24 that the suspect was moved to a police psychiatric facility. Questioning of the suspect was halted on medical grounds prior to his transfer. The man will be presented to an investigating magistrate when his health permits, according to the update.

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Viva diversity…

The video says undeclared civil war.

But this is the CBC’s headline – Kurds, anti-racism groups rally in Paris after 3 killed in cultural centre shooting

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Gypsy v Mohammedans in Montpellier France

Vibrant Diversity

Peace has returned to Montpellier after a meeting between imams and heads of gypsy clans

… As Métropolitain revealed this Friday, the community of sedentary gypsies here, the target of very violent punitive expeditions on Thursday evening, must meet Aymen’s family, starting this evening, after Fernand Maraval, known as Yaka, has been received by the imams of Mosson and Petit Bard and after a meeting in the prefecture of Hérault which took place at the beginning of the afternoon. Yaka Maraval and the gypsy victims who had the apartments ransacked, set on fire, as well as two trucks and a car, “do not understand why no police protection measures had been put in place on Thursday evening” to prevent 250 to 300 young people armed with Kalashnikovs and iron bars invest without problem the residence Jupiter , to commit abuses, having terrorized parents and children.

Below – how #Aymen met his demise.

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Paris shooting: Three dead and several injured in attack

A gunman has opened fire in central Paris, killing three people and wounding four others.

Witnesses said the attacker targeted a Kurdish community centre and restaurant and prosecutors said they would look into a possible racist motive.

A suspect aged 69 was quickly arrested and it soon emerged he was freed from custody recently.

Authorities appealed for people to avoid the area in Strasbourg-Saint Denis in the 10th district of Paris.

There is no confirmed motive for the shooting, but Paris Prosecutor Laure Beccuau confirmed that that the suspect had just been released, a year after he had attacked tents at a migrant camp in Paris with a sword.

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Court upholds Eric Zemmour’s conviction over anti-Muslim comments

The European Court of Human Rights rejected the appeal of former French presidential candidate Eric Zemmour, who was convicted in France for “inciting discrimination and religious hatred” over comments targeting the French Muslim community.

“The court held that the interference with the applicant’s right to freedom of expression had been necessary in a democratic society to protect the rights of others that were at stake,” the ECHR wrote in a statement released Tuesday.

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Nice: Eight Mohammedan terrorists guilty over the deadly Bastille Day lorry attack

All eight defendants have been found guilty over the July 2016 lorry attack in the southern French city of Nice in which 86 people were killed.

Seven men and a woman were sentenced by a special court in Paris to jail terms ranging from two to 18 years.

Three were convicted of association with a terrorist, while five others were found guilty of supplying weapons.

The attacker, Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel, was shot dead after driving a lorry into crowds on Bastille Day.

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