A Belgian man was shot dead in a deserted lay-by in the east of France while his two young children watched from the family car.

"/> A Belgian man was shot dead in a deserted lay-by in the east of France while his two young children watched from the family car.

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DIJON

Belgian tourist murdered in front of his children

A Belgian man was shot dead in a deserted lay-by in the east of France while his two young children watched from the family car.

The incident took place early on Tuesday morning in a rest area on the A31 between Dijon and Nancy in the east of the country. Xavier Baligant, a divorced father aged 29, was returning home from holiday with his two young children after a holiday in the south of France. 

His body was found lying in front of the toilets in the lay-by. According to TV channel M6, he had been shot a total of five times, once in the head.

“The way he was killed suggests a contract killing,” according to the channel’s report which cited a source close to the inquiry.

Police are working with Belgian authorities to see whether Baligant was known to his assailant or whether he was the unlucky victim of being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

A report in local daily Est Republicain says that a CCTV camera at the scene could give police a clear view of what happened, depending on the quality of the footage.

The incident happened at 2am when it was dark. Other footage will be used to track Baligant’s movements and to see whether any car was following the victim.

 

The man from Nivelles in Belgium, south of Brussels, where he worked for a pharmaceutical company. Family and friends in Belgium have spoken of a “lovely guy with no problems who took great care of his two children.” Another said he was “a great guy and incredibly kind.”

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POLICE

Guns, Chechens and reprisal raids – what is going on in Dijon?

Local authorities say that calm has been restored to the eastern French town of Dijon after four nights of running battles, so what is behind the violence?

Guns, Chechens and reprisal raids - what is going on in Dijon?
The eastern French town has been rocked by four night of violence. Photo: AFP

What happened?

Starting on Friday, June 12th, a series of violent clashes between groups of Chechens and local residents rocked the usually quiet town of Dijon, which lies in the heart of the wine-producing Burgundy area.

Cars were set ablaze, people attacked, at least one person was shot and weapons were brandished in a series of clashes that continued over the weekend and into Monday.

What sparked this?

The trigger appears to have been an attack on a local teenage boy who is a member of the Chechen community. He was attacked and beaten by local gang members for reasons that are not clear.

Other members of the Chechen community – some of whom had travelled to Dijon from elsewhere – launched a 'reprisal' raid against those they believed were responsible.

Local gang members – some of them armed – retaliated and the situation spun out of control.

The boy's father has since appealed for calm.

He told French newspaper Le Parisien: “The story of my son's attack has spread on social media and within the Chechen community.

“But while we hadn't asked for anything, several people we don't know came spontaneously to Dijon. And they overreacted.”

Far right figures including Marine Le pen have seized on the incidents. Photo: AFP

Is it a race war?

No. The incidents have been seized upon by the far right, both within France and abroad, in an attempt to make political capital.

Marine Le Pen, leader of the French far right party Rassemblement National travelled to Dijon, despite being asked not to by local authorities, and launched an attack on president Emmanuel Macron.

Alarming images of the violence, some real and some seemingly filmed elsewhere, have also been circulated on social media by far right figures.

But at this stage it seems that the attacks are rooted in criminality and gangs, rather than having a racial dimension. They mostly took place in the Grésilles area of Dijon, a multi-ethnic area that is one of the town's poorest and most deprived and has seen problems with crime and drugs.

The boy who was attacked seems to have lived in the town, but many of the Chechens who took part in the violence are reported to have travelled from other parts of France, or even over the border from Germany and Belgium.

There are around 30,000 Chechens living in France, many fleeing the wars of the 1990s that have destablised the country.  

The clean-up operation has now begun. Photo: AFP

What's happening now?

For the moment, calm seems to have been restored.

Local police were undoubtedly caught out by the sudden eruption of violence but on Monday around 150 gendarmes mobiles – the specialist crowd control police officers from the national gendarmerie – were deployed to Dijon.

There have also been arrests made regarding the original assault on the teenager.

On Tuesday night things remained calm and now locals are beginning the clean-up operation.

The police investigation is ongoing and local authorities are also dealing with accusations from angry residents that they were “abandoned” during the four days of violence and terror.

The Junior Minister of the Interior Laurent Nunez, who was in Dijon on Tuesday, promised “an extremely firm response” to the incidents.

 

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