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PARIS 2024 OLYMPICS

France planning AI-assisted crowd control for Paris Olympics

French authorities plan to use an AI-assisted crowd control system to monitor people during the 2024 Paris Olympics, according to a draft law seen by AFP on Thursday.

France planning AI-assisted crowd control for Paris Olympics
The under-construction Olympic Aquatics Centre, opposite the Stade de France in Saint-Denis, north of Paris. Photo by STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN / AFP

The system is intended to allow the security services to detect disturbances and potential problems more easily, but will not use facial recognition technology, the bill says.

French privacy laws mean that facial recognition technology and drones are not generally used to police public events.

The technology could be particularly useful during the highly ambitious open-air opening ceremony which is set to see Olympians sail down the river Seine in front of a giant crowd of 600,000 people.

French police and sports authorities faced severe criticism in May after shambolic scenes during the Champions League final in Paris when football fans were caught in a crowd crush and teargassed.

The draft law, which was presented to the cabinet on Thursday, proposes other security measures including the use of full-body scanners and increases the sentences for hooliganism.

Organisers and Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin have both argued in favour of using so-called “intelligent” security camera software that scans images for suspect or dangerous behaviour.

The use of such a system during the Olympics is an “experimentation”, the  draft law says, but could be applied for future public events which face terrorism-related or crowd control risks.

“No biometric data is used, nor facial recognition technology and it does not enable any link or interconnection or automatic flagging with any other personal data system,” the bill states.

The games’ organising committee said on November 21st that it needed to lift its budget estimate by 10 per cent from €3.98 billion to €4.48 billion, partly as a result of inflation.

Rather than opening the games in an athletics stadium as is customary, organisers have planned a ceremony on July 26th, 2024 with a flotilla of some 200 boats sailing down the river Seine.

The banks of the river can accomodate 100,000 people who will have to buy tickets, while another 500,000 are set to watch for free from the street level, according to government estimates.

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POLITICS

Mayor of southern French town wants to introduce curfew for children

The mayor of a town in southern France says that he wants to introduce a curfew that would ban minors from being outside without an adult at night.

Mayor of southern French town wants to introduce curfew for children

After several high-profile cases of teen violence including a boy who died after being beaten up outside his school on the outskirts of Paris, the French prime minister has announced a series of measures to ‘crackdown on youth violence’.

But the mayor of one town in southern France wants to go one step further – saying he intends to publish on Monday a decree that includes a curfew for children.

The far-right politician Robert Ménard – mayor of the town of Beziers since 2014 – told French media over the weekend that he intends to introduce a curfew so that children “cannot be on their own, without their parents, without an adult, after 11 o’clock in the evening”.

This would not be the first time that Ménard has tried to introduce a curfew.

Shortly after his election in 2014 he published a decree stating that children aged 13 and under could not be outdoors without an adult after 11pm, during weekends and the school holidays.

His measure was struck down by the Conseil d’Etat – France’s highest judicial authority – and the town was ordered to pay €5,000 to the Ligue des droits de l’homme (human rights league) which had brought the case to the Conseil d’Etat.

Undeterred, Ménard over the weekend told BFM TV that he thought that the political context had changed, with increasing conversation about youth violence.

READ ALSO Is violence in French schools really on the rise?

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