Recent comments in /f/worldnews
primatepicasso t1_je2ckfn wrote
[deleted] t1_je2cj7r wrote
Reply to comment by TheLit420 in Ukraine Defense intelligence shows insides of Shahed drones, which Russia uses to attack by DoremusJessup
[removed]
rein_deer7 OP t1_je2c7ej wrote
correction
A previous version of this article incorrectly said that France’s interior minister blamed far-right instigators for violent actions at recent protests. In fact, he blamed far-left instigators. The article has been corrected.
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.
As protests continue in France, videos show police beating protesters, firing tear gas at crowds, and making seemingly arbitrary arrests. (Video: Leila Barghouty/Reuters) 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.
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“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.”
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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 (LDH), or Human Rights League, one of the premier human rights groups in France.
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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.
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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.
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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, ball-shaped 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 expert. 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.
One case this month, captured in an audio recording obtained and verified by the French newspaper Le Monde on Friday, has generated a particular outcry, intensifying public ire toward the special riot police force known as the BRAV-M. Created in 2019 to tamp down the yellow vest demonstrations, the unit deploys in pairs on motorcycles to help quell protests.
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In the audio clip, excerpts of which were published by news site Loopsider on social media, members of one BRAV-M unit can be heard threatening, slapping and directing sexual innuendo at a group of seven young people during an arrest in Paris on Monday, according to Le Monde.
“You’re so lucky to be sitting there, now that we’ve arrested you. I swear, I’d have broken your legs, literally. I can tell you, we’ve broken elbows and faces ... but you, I’d have broken your legs,” one officer says in the recording, Le Monde reported. Two slapping sounds can be heard, the report says, along with an officer saying, “Wipe that smile off your face.”
Later in the clip, a police officer warns the young people they have detained: “Next time we come, you won’t be getting in the car to go to the police station. You’ll be getting in another thing called an ambulance to go to the hospital.”
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Paris police chief Laurent Nuñez said Friday he was “very shocked” by the audio clip and that police misconduct was unacceptable and would be investigated.
Some activists and leftist lawmakers are calling for the dissolution of the specialized brigade. But on French radio Saturday, Nunez voiced his support for BRAV-M, calling it “an indispensable unit for the maintenance of the republican order.”
Baudouin, the LDH president, also called for the formation of an independent body to investigate allegations of police brutality.
He said he worries heavy-handed police tactics will only fuel violence on the streets.
For the government, “it is absolutely necessary to recognize the legitimacy of the popular movement, take it into account and return to a real social dialogue, to calm the current tensions,” he added, “otherwise there will be an escalation that will no longer be controllable.”
intoaether t1_je2c2zu wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Martine Vik Magnussen: Billionaire’s son admits role in death to BBC by msemen_DZ
Peter Madsen did this exact thing to Kim Wall and he had even less chance of getting away with it
Ag0r t1_je2bvly wrote
Reply to comment by TheLit420 in Ukraine Defense intelligence shows insides of Shahed drones, which Russia uses to attack by DoremusJessup
I doubt the kinetic energy of the mass of the drone really has much impact (heh) on the destructive potential, that is probably almost entirely down to the explosives it's packing.
More mass in the drone would be useful for making it less prone to bring buffeted around by wind, so it would be easier to stay on target with less sophisticated equipment perhaps.
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SheepishSheepness t1_je2bqzg wrote
Reply to comment by WhoStoleMyPassport in Ukraine needs more prosthetics clinicians as war toll mounts by Quantum_II
Sad 😞
MofongoForever t1_je2bp4y wrote
Reply to comment by TazBaz in Ukraine Defense intelligence shows insides of Shahed drones, which Russia uses to attack by DoremusJessup
And if the components are easy to source, Ukraine could set up their own manufacturing lines while western countries try and make it more difficult for Iran to get components. Fire off a dozen or so of these at a time to smoke out the SAM sites then hit those w/ more accurate GPS guided munitions once located.
Troofbetold2592 t1_je2b9x4 wrote
Reply to comment by Positive_Prompt_3171 in Climate change making Earth ‘uninhabitable’ Guterres warns by GeraldKutney
I agree with him get wrecked.
1lluminist t1_je2b6ud wrote
Reply to comment by Negative_Band183 in French authorities raided five banks on Tuesday as part of an investigation into suspected cases of massive tax fraud and money laundering, prosecutors said by DoremusJessup
Cum-ex
They raided a sperm bank by mistake and found the Kleenex.
NoseAdditional2142 t1_je2aijh wrote
Reply to France’s small and mid-size towns have been at the forefront of the battle against President Emmanuel Macron’s contentious pension reform, in some places staging the biggest rallies in living memory by DoremusJessup
How do people expect to maintain a retirement system set in the 60s and expanded in the 80s when the ratio or workers to retirees has drastically changed due to population aging? France already has one of the highest taxation rate in the world, and its middle class doesn't have much fiscal juice left to be squeezed. The rich and corporations can evade taxes easily, and good luck trying to modify the EU treaties that allows them to do so. So what gives?
Robw1970 t1_je2ac6o wrote
Reply to comment by AbandonedSamurai in India’s overall exports crosses an all time high of $750 billion by Falls_stuff
Sure, well this is the China loss part. https://www.cnbc.com/2022/12/04/manufacturing-orders-from-china-down-40percent-in-demand-collapse.html
https://old.reddit.com/r/worldnews/comments/125dakm/madeinindia_iphone_shipments_jump_162/
https://asia.nikkei.com/Economy/India-GDP-outpaces-China-despite-slowdown-to-4.4-last-quarter
GeraldKutney OP t1_je2a26l wrote
Reply to comment by MobileAirport in Climate change making Earth ‘uninhabitable’ Guterres warns by GeraldKutney
Too bad that you do not understand the science of climate change. Are you a climate denier?
Secure-Badger-1096 t1_je29tr5 wrote
Reply to comment by From_Ancient_Stars in Ukraine Defense intelligence shows insides of Shahed drones, which Russia uses to attack by DoremusJessup
i forgot about that! i was thinking more of payloads and velocity than self destruct/suicide drones
dalerian t1_je29l3r wrote
Reply to Russia fires cruise missiles in waters off Japan's coast during training exercise by TallAd3975
Surprised they have 2 to spare.
Sprozz t1_je29h9j wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Martine Vik Magnussen: Billionaire’s son admits role in death to BBC by msemen_DZ
I'm sure there are people who thought something similar right before getting murdered.
Positive_Prompt_3171 t1_je28ty4 wrote
Reply to comment by AllThingsEndBadly in Climate change making Earth ‘uninhabitable’ Guterres warns by GeraldKutney
What a shit human you are
Joezev98 t1_je28p77 wrote
Reply to comment by BasicLuxury in Ukraine Defense intelligence shows insides of Shahed drones, which Russia uses to attack by DoremusJessup
>Note how these drones lack landing gear.
Because they don't have to search for a target. The coordinates of energy infrastructure and civilian hospitals are well known.
JustSomeBloke5353 t1_je28i7m wrote
Reply to comment by redmamoth in Martine Vik Magnussen: Billionaire’s son admits role in death to BBC by msemen_DZ
You mean like this?
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-36401185
I can’t see how this could possibly go wrong.
arcosapphire t1_je2821x wrote
Reply to comment by sprish in Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party dissolved by rob5i
Isn't this one of those situations where everyone is an asshole?
[deleted] t1_je27xcc wrote
AltCtrlShifty t1_je27v2d wrote
If there isn’t jail time, it was worth the risk to them.
meickoff t1_je2758s wrote
Reply to comment by autotldr in Romania-India defense cooperation agreement signed in New Delhi by Falls_stuff
That's literally the cookie policy
autotldr t1_je26ork wrote
Reply to France’s small and mid-size towns have been at the forefront of the battle against President Emmanuel Macron’s contentious pension reform, in some places staging the biggest rallies in living memory by DoremusJessup
This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 93%. (I'm a bot)
> Like many others in this sleepy town of under 15,000, Patrick said protests against the government's planned pension overhaul would need to "Harden" to have any chance of succeeding.
> Nestled in a rural region roughly 120 kilometres south of Paris, Montargis has witnessed its biggest rallies in living memory since the start of an increasingly bitter battle over pension reform, with the number of protesters peaking at around 4,000 - equivalent to almost a third of the local population - on March 7.
> She described the rallies against pension reform as a "New phenomenon" in a region unaccustomed to street protests.
Extended Summary | FAQ | Feedback | Top keywords: protest^#1 government^#2 work^#3 Macron^#4 pension^#5
Constant_Fun_7326 t1_je2cmzv wrote
Reply to French authorities raided five banks on Tuesday as part of an investigation into suspected cases of massive tax fraud and money laundering, prosecutors said by DoremusJessup
They won't see a day in jail.