Several
prisons in France attacked with guns fired and vehicles burned
By Euronews
Published on
15/04/2025 - 12:18 GMT+2•Updated 13:57
Vechicles
were set on fire in several prison car parks and a prison in the southern city
of Toulon was fired at with an automatic weapon.
Attacks have
been carried out on several prisons in France, which involved weapons being
fired and vehicles set on fire, the country's justice minister said on Tuesday.
On Monday
night, the entrance to a prison in Toulon was shot at with an automatic weapon,
while vehicles were torched in the car parks of several prisons, according to
various French media reports and posts shared on social media.
In addition
to Toulon, prisons were reportedly targeted in Aix-en-Provence and Marseille,
Valence and Nîmes, Luynes, Nanterre and Villepinte.
France's
Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin wrote in a post on X that prisons had faced
"intimidation attempts", and said he was going to Toulon to support
affected officers.
"The
French Republic is facing up to the problem of drug trafficking and is taking
measures that will massively disrupt the criminal networks," he added.
A source
close to the case told French media that the attacks appeared to be coordinated
and "clearly linked to the minister's anti-narcobanditry strategy".
The French
government in February launched a new campaign against drug trafficking, vowing
to tackle rising gang violence and deaths linked to growing cocaine imports.
In a post on
X on Tuesday, France's prison guard union, FO Justice, shared its "deepest
concern and anger" following the "extremely serious" attacks
overnight.
The union
demanded "a strong, immediate, and unambiguous response from the
state".
Interior
Minister Bruno Retailleau has asked local administrations in France to
"immediately strengthen the protection of officers and institutions"
following the attacks.
"The
state's response must be relentless," he wrote on X. "Those who
attack prisons and their officers deserve to be locked up in those prisons and
monitored by those officers."
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