FranceLink

Foreign dirty tricks suspected for pig heads left at Paris mosques

Police investigating who was behind the dumping of pig heads outside several mosques around the French capital overnight on Monday say they have identified a Serbian-registered vehicle and a Croation mobile phone they suspect were used by two individuals behind the provocation. 

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

French police suspect that people who put pigs' heads outside Paris mosques on Monday night were acting under orders from a foreign intelligence service, probably Russian, reports BBC News.

The heads were found on Tuesday morning outside nine mosques in central Paris and surrounding suburbs, prompting a wave of outrage and condemnation.

But investigators have now said the two people involved drove a Serb-registered car, used a Croatian mobile telephone, and crossed into Belgium a few hours later.

The incident has striking similarities with other recent provocations – notably the daubing of Stars of David on Paris walls in October 2023, and the painting of red hands on the city's Holocaust memorial in May 2024.

Police identified a Moldovan connection in the first case, and in the second four Bulgarians are due to stand trial in October.

The prosecutor in the red hands affair said it appeared "to be an attempt to destabilise France orchestrated by Russian intelligence".

Russia and Iran have both been named by French intelligence as countries liable to provoke dissension in France through "dirty tricks".

Police investigating the latest affair told media that they were approached by a Normandy farmer who said he had sold "about 10" pigs' heads to two men driving a Serbian-registered car.

The same car was seen in CCTV footage in the Oberkampf region of eastern Paris on Monday evening, and then again near some of the mosques.

Police said tracing of the Croatian mobile phone showed the car crossing into Belgium early on Tuesday morning.

Read more of this report from BBC News.