TV, radio and print media were united in their condemnation of shootings which killed four people, including three children, at a school in Toulouse on Tuesday.

"/> TV, radio and print media were united in their condemnation of shootings which killed four people, including three children, at a school in Toulouse on Tuesday.

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Media unites to condemn school shootings

TV, radio and print media were united in their condemnation of shootings which killed four people, including three children, at a school in Toulouse on Tuesday.

Media unites to condemn school shootings
Libération newspaper 20 March 2012

“France is in mourning” said left-leaning daily Libération.

The newspaper’s cover included a list of the victims of the tragedy on Monday morning, as well as the three soldiers killed on March 11th and 15th, now believed to have been killed by the same man.

In its editorial, the newspaper said it was “dangerous to prejudge the motives of the killer.”

“What link can we make between an anti-semitic crime in front of a Jewish school and the murder of French soldiers, of whom two were Muslim,” it said.

Moving testimonies from eyewitnesses were included in most of the coverage.

Many also reported that the murderer was seen wearing a small camera around his neck. 

“Did he film himself?” asked France’s biggest circulation newspaper, Ouest-France.

Many TV news channels and newspapers also speculated on the profile of the killer, interviewing criminal psychologists.

Daily newspaper Le Figaro quoted psychiatrist Roland Coutanceau, who said the killer was likely to be either “mentally ill with a paranoid character” or “part of a terrorist organisation.”

Tributes were paid to the teacher who was killed with his two sons, Jonathan Sandler.

BFM TV reported that Sandler was a “warm man, dedicated to the teaching of his religion.”

A report of a march in his honour in Bordeaux, where he was born, included tributes from church elders who knew him.

Sandler left a wife and a young daughter of 18 months.

An increase in the security level in the south west of the country also received wide coverage.

TV channel TF1 reported that the “scarlet” level is the highest of four security states that can be declared.

This is the first time the “scarlet” level has been applied since the creation of France’s system of terror alerts, known as Vigipirate. 

It gives authorities widespread power to disrupt daily life and implement sweeping security measures, including stopping air travel and blocking access to tunnels.

With just 33 days to go until voting begins in the French presidential election, all candidates suspended the campaign, at least until Wednesday.

Both President Nicolas Sarkozy and Socialist candidate François Hollande went to Toulouse to visit the school.

The campaign is not the only thing to be put on hold. 

Regional newspaper La Dépêche reported on Tuesday that the carnival in Toulouse, planned for this Wednesday, has been cancelled.

The carnival was due to be the first since 1988 and thousands of participants have been preparing for several months.

“In a context of mourning, this decision seemed to go without saying,” said a carnival spokesman, Laurent Vildary.

Asked whether a new date has been fixed, Vildary said “we are still in shock over this drama. When the time comes, we will take the decision.”

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New flights to south of France launched by Jet2

The low-cost British airline Jet2 has announced it will begin operating new services between the UK and southern France, starting in the summer of 2022.

New flights to south of France launched by Jet2
Flights will operate from May 1st 2022. Photo: AFP

When travelling is possible again, getting to Toulouse from the north-west of England is set to become much easier with the launch of new flights from Manchester Airport.

Jet2 already flies to Bergerac, La Rochelle and Nice. The company announced the new destination in response to demand for summer 2022 holidays.

Flights to the “Pink City” in south west France will operate from May 1st until October 16th 2022.

“Since putting our Summer 2022 programme on sale from Manchester Airport, we have added a significant number of flights and destinations in response to the demand from customers who want to get their all-important holidays booked in,” Steve Heapy, CEO of Jet2.com and Jet2holidays, said in a press release.

Since the British government announced a lockdown roadmap on Tuesday, with plans to end England restrictions by June 21st, the company has begun to see a surge in bookings.

READ ALSO: Will summer holidays in France be possible this year?

However the present rules on entry into France from the UK are the strictest they have ever been, with virtually no travel allowed between the two countries and no end-date to the current restrictions.

Jet2 plans to reopen its services in mid-May.

“Following the UK government announcement that international travel will not return until May 17th 2021 at the earliest, we have taken the decision to extend the suspension of flights and holidays up to and including 16th May 2021,” Jet2 said on Twitter.

https://twitter.com/jet2tweets/status/1364188796506562561

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