logo
French court jails migrant smugglers over 2022 Channel deaths

French court jails migrant smugglers over 2022 Channel deaths

LeMonde2 days ago
A French court on Monday, June 30 sentenced seven Afghans and two Iraqi Kurds to seven to eight years in jail over the deadly capsizing of a boat carrying migrants from France to England in 2022. The small boat had departed France early on December 14, 2022, carrying people from Afghanistan, Albania, India and Senegal.
Four people died and four went missing after the boat capsized a few kilometres from the English coast with only one of the bodies identified – an Afghan man. Rescuers saved 39 people from the shipwreck.
A court in the French city of Lille sentenced three men to eight years behind bars. They included an Afghan being tried in absentia and thought to be the mastermind of the smuggling operation. It handed the rest seven-year sentences over the disaster, including two Afghan brothers accused of financing the operation. A 10 th man who is being held in Belgium is to be tried at a later date. A British court has already sentenced a Senegalese minor who drove the boat to nine years in jail, French prosecutors said.
According to the investigation, several people heard a loud bang that sounded like the boat had been punctured before the departure. The smugglers told the passengers not to worry and that the boat was the only one available for the crossing. But the sea was rough and there were not enough life jackets for all the passengers – those who died were not wearing any, according to the testimony of survivors.
After one or two hours, the boat filled with water. Panicked passengers stood up to get the attention of another ship, but the hull of the capsizing boat burst under the weight of the water. All the passengers fell into the freezing sea.
The 2022 accident was one of the deadliest in the Channel in recent years. In November 2021, another deadly incident killed 27 people off the French coast, in a case that has not yet gone to court. At least 17 people have died attempting the perilous Channel crossing from France to Britain this year, after a record 78 lost their lives last year.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Children ‘subjected to monstrosities': Report exposes decades of abuse in French schools
Children ‘subjected to monstrosities': Report exposes decades of abuse in French schools

France 24

time38 minutes ago

  • France 24

Children ‘subjected to monstrosities': Report exposes decades of abuse in French schools

French lawmakers on Wednesday accused the state of "structural dysfunctions" in handling child abuse in schools, delivering a scathing 330-page report that chronicles decades of systemic violence and silence across France's educational institutions. 'Children across France were subjected to monstrosities,' wrote the committee president, Fatiha Keloua Hachi, describing the three-month investigation as a 'deep dive into the unthinkable'. The probe, led by centrist Violette Spillebout from Macron's ruling party Renaissance, and Paul Vannier, a lawmaker with the hard-left France Unbowed party (LFI), heard testimony from 140 people, including survivors. While abuse occurred in both public and private schools, the MPs said Catholic institutions were especially affected, citing 'stricter educational models' and a persistent 'law of silence'. In many cases, they said, it wasn't just the children who kept quiet but also school officials, clergy and civil servants who failed to act or actively covered up wrongdoing. Historian Claude Lelièvre traced this back to the culture of silence and obedience in religious teaching orders. "They viewed obedience as a cardinal virtue, both for themselves and for their students. Obedience at all costs. Obedience to someone who, in their eyes, was the lieutenant of God on earth," he said. Public schools, by contrast, embraced a different philosophy. "It wasn't about obeying a person," Lelièvre said, "but helping children consent to shared rules." The Bétharram case Much of the report focuses on the Bétharram Catholic boarding school in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques region, where priests, teachers and staff are accused of having sexually and physically abused students from 1957 to 2004. According to the MPs, some 200 complaints have been filed since the beginning of the year. Victims described acts of 'unprecedented severity, of absolute sadism'. Lawmakers called Bétharram a "textbook example" of the state's failure to prevent and monitor abuse, warning that the same systemic flaws "are still in place today". Prime Minister François Bayrou, who was education minister from 1993 to 1997 and sent some of his children to the school, has faced growing criticism. The report stops short of directly implicating him, but Spillebout and Vannier wrote: "In the absence of action from a minister who was informed and in a position to intervene, the abuse of students at Bétharram continued for years." Bayrou's eldest daughter, Helene Perlant, accused the clergy running the school of systemic abuse, saying a priest beat her during summer camp when she was 14. She said however her father did not know about the incident. In a footnote, Vannier accused Bayrou of having "knowingly misled" the National Assembly in March, when he initially claimed to have learned about the scandal "at the same time as everyone else, in the press". He later admitted he had received information, but said he had not grasped the seriousness of the allegations. Lack of figures and oversight Beyond Bétharram, the report highlights the state's failure to monitor abusive staff. Regional background checks allowed sanctioned teachers to move between schools undetected. "The Ministry of Education," the report said, "is still incapable of ensuring that a sanctioned teacher cannot simply be transferred to another school." This kind of administrative evasion has been going on for decades. "For a long time now, there has been a culture of cover-up, of transferring problematic staff, of not reporting incidents when they occurred," Lelièvre said. The committee also pointed to a lack of national data on abuse. 'No consolidated public data is available on violence committed against pupils by members of staff,' the report stated, urging the government to commission new surveys. Where data does exist — notably on sexual violence — the gap between official data and victimisation surveys is stark. While national surveys estimate 7,000 pupils are affected annually, state school leaders reported only 280 incidents in 2023-2024. 'The Ministry is not really tracking these issues thoroughly,' Lelièvre said. "The figures are inconsistent, and there's a lack of proper monitoring and understanding of what's happening. We need much more robust oversight, including independent monitoring, not just relying on the institution itself." Urgent recommendations To address what they call a "systemic culture of impunity", the MPs called for tighter background checks and the creation of a national reporting platform that would allow whistleblowers to bypass traditional hierarchies. The new platform, called Signal Educ', would be accompanied by annual regional reports on abuse in schools. They also recommended that contracts between the state and private schools include binding provisions on abuse prevention and child safety, with clear sanctions for non-compliance. For boarding schools, they called for yearly unannounced inspections and confidential interviews with randomly selected students. Other proposals include the creation of a national compensation fund for victims and a legal review to potentially extend, or in some cases eliminate, statutes of limitation for sexual abuse of minors. Although the cross-party commission unanimously adopted the report, it remains to be seen whether lawmakers will act on its recommendations.

French police arrest 'incel' teen over alleged plot to attack women
French police arrest 'incel' teen over alleged plot to attack women

Euronews

timean hour ago

  • Euronews

French police arrest 'incel' teen over alleged plot to attack women

French authorities have arrested an 18-year-old man who claimed ties to the misogynistic so-called "incel" movement and placed him under investigation over an alleged plot to carry out attacks targeting women, according to media reports. The probe by France's national anti-terrorist prosecutor's office (PNAT) is reportedly the department's first case involving a suspect who identifies as an incel, or "involuntary celibate". This refers to a fringe online subculture dominated by men who blame women for their lack of sexual activity and who sometimes call for violence against them. The office said on Tuesday that it had opened a judicial investigation "against a young man, aged 18, claiming to be a member of the incel movement," adding that he was being probed for allegedly "associating with terrorist criminals to prepare one or more crimes against people," French media said. The suspect was reportedly arrested on Friday near a school in the central Saint-Étienne region and was found to be carrying two knives. Sources close to the investigation told French media that he had been watching misogynistic content on social media and that he been planning to attack women. In May last year, French police arrested a 26-year-old man on suspicion of planning a mass killing in Bordeaux. The Bordeaux prosecutor said police investigators found evidence that the suspect was interested in the incel movement. Following the recent popularity of Netflix's hit show Adolescence, which featured a young schoolboy in the UK who was drawn into a violent form of incel ideology, France's education minister last month said it would be shown in French secondary schools.

Teen plotting attacks on women charged in France's first 'incel' case
Teen plotting attacks on women charged in France's first 'incel' case

France 24

time2 hours ago

  • France 24

Teen plotting attacks on women charged in France's first 'incel' case

According to a source close to the investigation, the suspect, Timothy G., was arrested on Friday by the DGSI security service near a public high school in the southeastern city of Saint-Etienne. According to sources close to the case, the suspect was arrested with two knives in his bag and identified himself as a member of the "incel," or involuntary celibate, subculture. The "incel" movement is an internet subculture rife with misogyny, with men tending to blame women and feminism for their romantic failings. They typically target those who they see as attractive or sexually active women. The National Anti-Terrorism Prosecutor's Office (PNAT) said that an investigation had been opened on Tuesday "against an 18-year-old man claiming to be part of the 'incel' movement". The man has been charged with terrorist conspiracy with a view to preparing one or more crimes against persons and imprisoned, the PNAT said. The involvement of anti-terror prosecutors appears to indicate that French authorities recognise this form of gender-based violence as terrorism. On Tuesday evening, Timothy G. appeared before a judge who remanded him in custody. He looked shy and had an almost hairless face and a slender build, according to an AFP journalist. His lawyer Maria Snitsar described him as "a teenager who is suffering, not a fighter preparing for action". According to one of the sources close to the case, the teenager, who wanted to become an engineer, was a fan of misogynist videos on social media, particularly short-video app TikTok. According to another source close to the case, this is the first time the PNAT has been called upon to investigate a man who exclusively identifies as part of the "incel" subculture. The concept had previously appeared only marginally in at least two cases handled by the anti-terrorism prosecutor's office.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store