French PM
calls for crackdown on knife crime after fatal high school stabbing
Boy, 15,
arrested after at least one child killed and three injured at
Notre-Dame-de-Toutes-Aides school in Nantes
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris and agencies
Thu 24 Apr
2025 19.26 CEST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/apr/24/stabbing-attack-france-high-school-nantes
The French
prime minister, François Bayrou, has called for a crackdown on teenage knife
crime after a high-school student stabbed four other children at his school,
killing at least one and injuring the others before being arrested.
The
15-year-old reportedly attacked fellow students with a knife during lunch break
on Thursday at the private Notre-Dame-de-Toutes-Aides secondary school in the
city of Nantes on the Atlantic coast. The attack took place at around 12.30pm
(11.30am BST), before teachers overpowered the boy. One female student was
killed. At least one other student is in a critical condition in hospital.
“This
tragedy shows once again the endemic violence that exists in a part of our
youth,” Bayrou said in a statement. “Fundamental questions must be asked in
terms of education, values and respect for human life.”
He ordered
checks inside and around schools to be intensified immediately. He also said a
commission would look into how to deal with teenage knife crime in terms of
weapons sales, and the owning and carrying of knives. It would study best
practice in other countries across the world.
Praising the
“bravery” of the teachers who intervened, the French president, Emmanuel
Macron, said the whole nation shared in the school’s shock and grief.
A police
source told France Info that the boy had first targeted a pupil on the second
floor of the school and had then attacked three others coming down the stairs.
He had gone into two classrooms, the source said. France Info also reported
that the boy was carrying two knives.
The boy was
in police custody and a psychiatric assessment was being carried out, France
Télévisions reported.
The
education minister, Élisabeth Borne, and the interior minister, Bruno
Retailleau, travelled to the school to show “solidarity with victims and the
school community”.
Images from
the scene showed police and troops surrounding the school as the investigation
began.
An official
at the school, which is part of a complex housing a primary and middle school,
would not comment on what happened. They said the school was concentrating on
caring for the students who were on campus at the time.
The school
administration sent a message to the families of the 2,000 or so students who
attend the school, informing them of the incident. Students had been
immediately confined inside the school.
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