France Link

French police plan demonstration against 'anti-cop hatred'

Police unions call a national protest on Wednesday over accusations of their violent behaviour during recent demonstrations against labour law reforms.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

French police unions have called a day of protest against "anti-cop hatred" on May 18th, reports Radio France Internationale.

They claim they are being portrayed as "savage brutes who blindly beat young people" following clashes between demonstrators and police on marches against the government's proposed labour reform and the trade unions' May Day rally.

Police union Alliance has called for rallies in French cities, including on Paris's Place de la République, the scene of left-wing Up All Night protests in recent weeks.

The union said it was angered by an "irresponsible determination to spread the idea that the police are savage brutes who blindly beat young people", dubbing it "ideological demagogy that incites hatred and violence against the republican police".

The call has been backed by another union, Alternative Police, which says it wants to "express its anger and denounce the anti-cop hatred that has been spreading among demonstrators for several weeks".

Groups of demonstrators, some chanting "Everybody hates the police!", have fought police on recent protests against the labour reform.

According to government spokesperson Stéphane Le Foll, "more than 300" officers have been injured since the beginning of the year.

On Tuesday seven were hurt during an anti-labour law protest in the western city of Nantes and the evacuation of a school occupied by migrants on Wednesday morning saw another three suffering minor injuries.

Although the government has denounced the violence, right-wing politicians have accused it of laxness, calling for tougher action against "casseurs", groups of youths who fight police and attack property during demonstrations, and for some protests to be banned.

But the injuries have not all been on one side.

A student lost an eye when he was hit be a Flashball fired by police in Rennes, in Brittany, on 28 April.

That night Paris police were caught on video clubbing and punching demonstrators, some of them handcuffed, while evacuating Up All Night participants from the Place de la République.

The authorities' tactics on May Day also attracted criticism, especially the kettling of a group of about 300 young people, described as violent by officials, who were at the head of the parade, and a number of alleged cases of brutality.

A police officer filmed hitting a school student during a demonstration in March has been charged with "violence committed by a person in authority".

Asked why no detailed figures of demonstrators injured have been released, the Paris prefecture said it was because many do not make official complaints.

Read more of this report by RFI.

See also:

Eco-protester had 'hands in air' when killed by French gendarme's grenade

Protests, violence and France's love-hate relationship with the police