Tristane Banon, the French writer who has accused Dominique Strauss-Kahn of attempted rape, has given her first television interview since filing her criminal complaint. She said pressing charges was the only way to finally put the incident behind her.

"/> Tristane Banon, the French writer who has accused Dominique Strauss-Kahn of attempted rape, has given her first television interview since filing her criminal complaint. She said pressing charges was the only way to finally put the incident behind her.

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CRIME

Banon gives first TV interview over DSK affair

Tristane Banon, the French writer who has accused Dominique Strauss-Kahn of attempted rape, has given her first television interview since filing her criminal complaint. She said pressing charges was the only way to finally put the incident behind her.

Banon gives first TV interview over DSK affair

Banon, 32, says the former International Monetary Fund director attempted to rape her in an empty apartment during an interview she conducted with him in February 2003 for a book she was writing.

In an interview on Wednesday evening with public broadcaster France 2, she was asked why she had waited eight years before reporting the incident to the police.

“It was very difficult before. For eight years, I believed that by not pressing charges, by listening to the advice given to me by my mother and by journalists, I could forget about it,” she said. “In fact, that’s not possible. One only realizes that with time.”

She denied rumours that have been circulating that she is psychologically fragile or has been manipulated into pressing charges, perhaps by Strauss-Kahn’s political opponents, after he was accused in May by a hotel maid in New York of sexual assault. Before that incident, Strauss-Kahn was seen as a leading presidential contender in France’s 2012 elections. He is currently on bail in New York, waiting for his next court appearance on August 1st.

Banon has done volunteer work for the city council of Boulogne-Billancourt, which is controlled by the conservative UMP party.

“I am neither unstable nor have I been manipulated, either by the city council of my city, by politicians on the left or right, by my lawyer or by my mother,” she insisted. “I am 32 years old and I can make my own decisions, even if they are difficult ones.”

Strauss-Kahn has denied any wrongdoing regarding Banon, calling her story of attempted rape “imaginary.” His lawyers have filed a slander complaint against her.

To critics who have accused her of courting publicity, the novelist shot back with the sardonic observation that the process she was going through was “very well paid.”

On Wednesday Banon’s mother, socialist party politician Anne Mansouret, was questioned by police regarding the case. It was she who had encouraged Banon not to press charges against Strauss-Kahn after the alleged incident. Mansouret said she gave police the names of “a certain number of people who played a role” in the affair.

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CRIME

French teen dies from heart failure after knife attack near school

A 14-year-old girl has died of a heart attack in eastern France after her school locked down to protect itself from a knife attacker who lightly wounded two other girls, an official said on Friday.

French teen dies from heart failure after knife attack near school

The teenager “was rescued by teachers who were very fast to call the fire department. She died at the end of the afternoon,” education official Olivier Faron said.

The girl’s middle school in the village of Souffelweyersheim closed its doors on Thursday afternoon after a man stabbed two other girls aged 7 and 11 outside a nearby primary facility.

“Sadly this pupil underwent an episode of very high stress that led to a heart attack,” Faron said.

A mother outside the middle school on Friday morning said her son in first year of secondary had also been scared during the lockdown the previous day.

“Whereas in the primary school they made it more like a game, perhaps here it was a little too direct,” Deborah Wendling said.

“He thought there was an armed person in the school. They could hear doors slamming, but in fact it was just other classrooms locking down.”

Faron defended the teachers.

READ ALSO: Schoolgirl threatens teacher with knife as tensions rise in French schools

“There is no perfect solution,” he said.

But “we will analyse in depth what happened. If there are lessons to be taken from this, we will take them.”

The two girls hurt in the attack were discharged from hospital on Thursday evening with only light wounds.

Police have arrested the 30-year-old assailant, and a probe has been opened into “attempted murder of minors”, the prosecutor’s office said.

It was not immediately clear what had motivated him, but it did not appear to be “a terrorist act”, it said.

He was “psychiatrically fragile” and appeared to have stopped his medication.

The incident follows a series of attacks on schoolchildren by their peers, in particularly the fatal beating earlier this month of Shemseddine, 15, outside Paris.

French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal on Thursday announced measures to crack down on teenage violence in and around schools.

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