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CRIME

New death threat against teacher in school in France’s Hauts-de-Seine region

Barely a day goes by without a fresh death threat against teaching staff being reported in France. This time, a teacher from a high school in the Hauts-de-Seine region has pressed charges after a student threatened to kill her.

This photograph taken in Chenove, in central-eastern France, on March 18, 2024, shows a police officer standing guard outside the Edouard Herriot secondary school before the visit of French Minister for Education and Youth, who is to meet the teaching staff following threats
This photo from March 18, 2024 shows a police officer outside the Edouard Herriot secondary school before the visit of the French Minister of Education, who was to meet teaching staff after the headteacher received threats. Another threat against a teacher has been made at a school in the Hauts-de-Seine region. (Photo by ARNAUD FINISTRE / AFP)

Following a disagreement in early March, the female student, who has now been expelled from the Michel-Ange school in Villeneuve-la-Garenne, called the teacher a “big bitch”  and said “in the name of Allah, I’m going to kill her”, French daily Le Figaro reported.

On Wednesday, the teenager’s brother went to the school to seek an explanation for his sister’s exclusion. Feeling threatened, the teacher went to the police to press charges about the student’s earlier death threats.

The girl has not yet been arrested for questioning, Le Figaro said.

This followed the news that the headmaster at the Maurice Ravel school in eastern Paris quit this week after receiving death threats online following an altercation with a student last month. He had asked her to remove her Muslim veil on school premises and she refused.

His departure sparked outrage, with Prime Minister Gabriel Attal saying France would seek to protect teachers and secularism, a key pillar of French education.

READ ALSO: Reader Question: Can I wear a hijab or headscarf while visiting France?

On Friday, lawmakers and officials, including Paris deputy mayor Emmanuel Gregoire, joined several dozen people for a rally in front of the school in the capital’s 20th district, heeding the call from the Socialist Party.

“We will not back down,” Bruno Bobkiewicz, general secretary of SNPDEN-Unsa, France’s top union of school principals, said at a news conference later Friday.

‘Nothing but secularism’

Bobkiewicz said school heads will continue to defend secularism.

“They know what they have to do and will continue to do it in spite of everything,” he said.

“There’s no room for negotiation, it’s all about secularism, nothing but secularism, and there’s no question of backing down on this subject.”

Secularism and religion are hot-button issues in France, which has Europe’s largest Muslim and Jewish communities.

The headmaster’s departure comes amid tensions in France following a series of threats and the murder of two teachers by radicalised former pupils, in 2020 and 2023.

In recent days, dozens of schools have also received threats of attack accompanied by gruesome videos.

Education Minister Nicole Belloubet said Friday a national “mobile school force” that could be dispatched to schools to protect their security would be established.

A member of the minister’s team told AFP the force would consist of around 20 people and could be deployed within 48 hours “in the event of an acute crisis.”

In 2004, authorities banned school children from wearing “signs or outfits by which students ostensibly show a religious affiliation” — such as
headscarves, turbans or Jewish skullcaps — on the basis of the country’s secular laws, which are meant to guarantee neutrality in state institutions.

‘We don’t stigmatise religions’

Martin Raffet, head of parents’ association FCPE Paris, said earlier in the day that some pupils did not understand the concept of secularism.

“The law needs to be discussed. Some pupils don’t understand it,” he said.

“We need to take the time to explain it to them and show them that we don’t stigmatise religions.”

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED: What does laïcité (secularism) really mean in France?

In late February, the headmaster had asked three students to remove their Islamic headscarves on the school premises.

But one of them — an adult who was receiving vocational training — refused and an altercation ensued, according to prosecutors.

The principal later received death threats online.

He said that he had taken the decision to leave, citing his safety and that of the school.

Education officials said he had taken “early retirement”.

Frederic, a parent at the school who declined to give his last name, said that for the past month pupils there had been “a bit agitated”.

The headmaster’s resignation had left parents feeling guilty, he told AFP.

“We wondered if we’d shown enough support.”

The SGEN-CFDT teachers’ union said: “The repetition of this type of scenario, against a backdrop of the instrumentalisation of religious beliefs,
is unacceptable and could lead to tragedy.

“We know this only too well in the French education system, following the murder of Samuel Paty.”

Paty, a 47-year-old history and geography teacher, was stabbed and then beheaded by a radicalised Islamist near his secondary school in the Paris suburb of Conflans-Sainte-Honorine in 2020.

 

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CRIME

French police summon Gérard Depardieu over suspected sexual assault

French police summoned cinema legend Gérard Depardieu on Monday over suspected incidents of sexual assault with a view towards placing him in custody for questioning, a police source said.

French police summon Gérard Depardieu over suspected sexual assault

Police were to question the actor over two women’s allegations that he assaulted them – one on a film set in 2014 and the other on another shoot in 2021, the source said, confirming a report by the BFMTV television channel.

The first woman accuses him of having assaulted her when she was a member of the crew on the 2022 feature film “The Green Shutters”.

The set designer, who filed a formal complaint in February, told investigative website Mediapart that Depardieu grabbed her as she left the set in a private hotel in Paris, groping her and making obscene comments, before his bodyguards removed him.

The second woman has alleged he groped her “all over” and made “inappropriate” remarks while she was an assistant on the set of 2015 film “Le magician et le Siamois” (“The Magician and the Siamese”), she told regional newspaper Le Courrier de l’Ouest.

Depardieu already faces a rape charge, as well as claims of assault by more than a dozen women – all of which he has strongly denied.

“Never ever have I abused a woman,” Depardieu wrote in Le Figaro newspaper in October.

Police in 2020 charged Depardieu with rape and sexual assault after actor Charlotte Arnould alleged he raped her in 2018 when she was 22.

Another sexual assault complaint filed last year by actor Hélène Darras, who said Depardieu groped and propositioned her during a 2007 film shoot, has been dropped for being past the statute of limitations.

Spanish journalist and author Ruth Baza said in December she had filed a criminal complaint in Spain against Depardieu, claiming he raped her in 1995 in Paris.

Despite the events having passed the statute of limitations, she said she decided to file her complaint hoping it would “help other people” to do the same.

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