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Court orders magazine Paris Match not to further publish Nice photos

A Paris court has refused a public prosecutor's demand that the latest issue of French weekly Paris Match be withdrawn from sale over its publication of gruesome CCTV images of the 2016 Bastille Day terrorist attack in Nice when a truck ploughed into seafront crowds, killing 86 and injuring hundreds more, but has ordered the magazine not to republish the photos.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

Paris Match does not need to pull an edition showing CCTV mages of the July 14th attack in Nice from France's newsstands but is forbidden from re-publishing it, a court has ruled, reports BBC News.

The ruling, made late on Thursday, came after the Paris prosecutor called for the magazine to be removed from sale.

The images show the moment a lorry, which killed 86 people, drove into crowds celebrating Bastille Day.

A victims' group has accused the magazine of morbid sensationalism.

Nice's Mayor Christian Estrosi also criticised the publication on the eve of the first anniversary of the attack.

On Thursday morning, the prosecutor asked the court to order the magazine's "withdrawal from sale" as well as a "ban on publication in all formats, particularly online".

But the court did not order the retraction of the magazines currently on sale around France,

Instead, it banned "any new publication", including online, of two images which the tribunal found were an attack "on human dignity".

Some retailers in Nice boycotted this week's issue of the magazine, local press reported - although the magazine has since denied this.

Ahead of the ruling, the French journalist's union SNJ criticised the prosecutor's request, warning that it was a curb on press freedom.

In an editorial published on the Paris Match website shortly before midnight on Wednesday, managing editor Olivier Royant said the magazine "aims to fight tooth and nail for the right of citizens, and first and foremost of victims, to know exactly what happened during the attack".

Adding that the editorial team wanted to pay tribute to the victims, Mr Royant explained that the magazine's journalists had found that the attacker had carried out reconnaissance trips to Nice's Promenade des Anglais for more than a year.

He argued that screen shots of the lorry's deadly path had featured recently on TV, and that they were distant images of the scene in which victims could not be identified.

Tunisian-born Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel, 31, ploughed the rented truck into a crowd of people as they watched a fireworks display late on July 14th 2016.

Children were among the dozens killed before police fatally shot the driver.

Read more of this report from BBC News.