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CRIME

Paris beefs up fight on crime against tourists

Paris has unveiled new measures to protect the 30 million visitors it hosts every year from pickpockets and muggers but has dropped plans -- announced after high-profile attacks on Asian tourists -- to bring in Chinese police officers.

Paris beefs up fight on crime against tourists
Police police plan a crackdown this summer on crime against tourists. Photo: Alain Jocard/AFP

Key among the measures is the use of special police teams dedicated to fighting crime on the Champs Elysees and in the Gare du Nord — where countless tourists arrive in the French capital from the airport or on trains from Britain and other countries. 

The security plans, announced at Louvre Museum by the Paris police chief, also increase to ten the number of highly popular tourist zones ones that will get special police attention, adding the Boulevard Saint-Germain, the Latin Quarter and Châtelet to areas such as the Eiffel Tower and Montmartre.

The measures build on a security plan drawn up last year in response to a wave of crime against tourists that at one point led staff at the Louvre to go on strike to protest the mini-armies of pickpockets, many from eastern Europe, operating inside the museum.

Paris police chief  Bernard Boucault said that a Bulgarian and a Bosnian officer would join the handful of Romanian police working in Paris alongside French counterparts but that for “technical” reasons, Chinese officers would not be brought in, as officials had previously announced.

Chinese tourists, who are estimated to spend an average of €1,300 during their holidays in France, are seen by criminals as a lucrative target as they often carry large amounts of cash.

Robbers attacked a group of Chinese visitors in March last year in a restaurant in and relieved them of €7,500 in cash, plane tickets and passports. Around one million Chinese tourists come every year to Paris, the world’s most visited city, and their numbers are expected to grow.

Tourists who flock to sites like Notre Dame or the Trocadero area are targeted by organised gangs of thieves and pickpockets, many of them children, from the Balkans and eastern Europe, who brandish fake "petitions" or requests for charity donations.

By Rory Mulholland

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CRIME

French parliament to investigate sexual abuse in cinema

The French parliament on Thursday agreed to create a commission of inquiry to investigate sexual and gender-based violence in cinema and other cultural sectors after several recent allegations.

French parliament to investigate sexual abuse in cinema

The Assemblée nationale unanimously agreed to set up the commission demanded by actor Judith Godreche in a speech to the upper house, the Senate, in February.

The 52-year-old actor and director has become a key figure in France’s MeToo movement since accusing directors Benoit Jacquot and Jacques Doillon of sexually assaulting her when she was a teenager. Both have denied the allegations.

All 52 lawmakers present for the vote on Thursday approved the creation of the commission, watched by Godreche, who was present in the public gallery in the chamber.

“It’s time to stop laying out the red carpet for abusers,” said Greens lawmaker Francesca Pasquini.

The new commission is to look into “the condition of minors in the various sectors of cinema, television, theatre, fashion and advertising”, as well as that of adults working in them, it said.

On the basis of Godreche’s proposal, a parliamentary commission on culture decided to extend the scope of the inquiry to also include other cultural sectors.

It is to “identify the mechanisms and failings that allow these potential abuses and violences”, “establish responsibilities” and make recommendations.

The parliament vote comes a day after actor Isild Le Besco, 41, said in an autobiography she was also raped by Jacquot during a relationship that started when she was 16, but was not ready to press charges.

Godreche, by contrast, has filed a legal complaint against the prominent arthouse director, over alleged abuse that occurred during a relationship that began when she was 14 and he was 25 years her senior.

She has also formally accused Doillon of abusing her as a 15-year-old actress in a film he directed.

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