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HEATWAVE

France probes deaths of Champagne workers in heatwave

French authorities were on Thursday investigating the deaths of four people who were harvesting grapes in the famed Champagne region, as locals suspected they suffered sunstroke in unusually high outdoor temperatures.

France probes deaths of Champagne workers in heatwave
A Harvester collects grapes for Champagne wine in a vineyard during a heatwave, in Ludes, central France, on September 8, 2023. (Photo by FRANCOIS NASCIMBENI / AFP)

Prosecutors in the cities of Reims and Chalons-en-Champagne said two men died in recent days while picking grapes, one woman died at home a few days after feeling faint during her vineyard work, while a fourth died in hospital after falling from a straddle tractor without showing any physical injuries from the fall.

None of the deaths was being considered suspicious and no autopsies ordered, prosecutors said.

They declined to comment on any possible link to high temperatures, reported at up to 34C in the region at the end of last week.

But winegrowers said the heat might be to blame.

“Maybe it will turn out that the sun had something to do with this,” said Maxime Toubart, head of the Champagne growers’ association.

“I am very sad,” he told AFP. “People don’t join the harvest to lose their lives.”

Some 120,000 people were helping with the two-week harvest every year and “obviously you’re going to have some accidents”, he said. Every year, “one or two people” died from heart failure or aneurysms, he said.

One risk factor was the lack of physical preparedness for what was a demanding job, he said.

“More and people come here without being in the physical shape needed for outdoor work. Some young people don’t have breakfast, don’t hydrate, are on medication or working shirtless,” he said.

Grapes for champagne are grown on 34 hectares in eastern France, where over 16,000 growers produce over 300 million bottles of champagne each year.

The United States are the main export market for champagne, followed by the United Kingdom, Japan and Germany.

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CRIME

French police search for gunmen after shootings in Paris suburb

French police were searching for gunmen after three people were killed in drug-related shootings in the Paris suburb of Sevran over the weekend.

French police search for gunmen after shootings in Paris suburb

Two men were shot dead near a cultural centre in the Seine-Saint-Denis suburb, to the northeast of the French capital on Sunday evening, less than 48 hours after another fatal shooting nearby, according to authorities.

The victims of Sunday’s shooting were aged 35 and 31 and known for violence and drug trafficking, according to police sources.

One was shot in the head, with two suspects fleeing on foot, leaving the magazine of an automatic weapon and 18 spent bullet casings behind them.

The second man was hit six times.

The town of 52,000 people was on edge, mayor Stephane Blanchet told AFP, saying people were living in fear of another shooting.

“There is a huge feeling of fear, that it could start again and [that someone could be hit by] a stray bullet,” Blanchet said.

“If it had been a beautiful sunny day, there would have been more people outside,” when the latest shooting happened, he said.

In the first shooting, a 28-year-old man was killed on a nearby housing estate early on Saturday, with three others wounded.

In March, French President Emmanuel Macron announced an ‘XXL’ cleanup of drug trafficking in the southern port city of Marseille and other towns across France, including Sevran, where the drugs trade has been blamed for a spate of death and violence.

One drug dealing hotspot in Sevran was ‘eradicated’ in that operation, police said.

“We are aware that when we do that, we destabilise traffic, we create greed and sometimes there are clashes,” Paris police chief Laurent Nunez said on Sunday.

“But we will still continue,” he added.

Local La France insoumise MP Clementine Autain accused the government of abandoning some areas, and said the suburb, “did not have the police presence of other areas”.

Drug-related violence has often flared in Sevran – considered a hub of drug trafficking in France – with the then-mayor calling for UN peacekeepers to be deployed there in 2011.

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