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| Activist Genevieve Legay was hospitalised after hitting her head in a fall as police charged protesters (AFP Photo/Valery HACHE) |
Nice (France) (AFP) - French officials faced fresh questions Sunday about the handling of the "yellow vest" protests after an elderly activist was seriously injured during a police charge in the southern city of Nice.
Prosecutors
there have opened an inquiry to try to establish what happened Saturday when
73-year-old Genevieve Legay suffered head injuries.
When
paramedics evacuated veteran activist Legay from the demonstration she was
bleeding from the head, but still conscious, AFP journalists at the scene
noted.
Her
daughter later said that she had suffered several fractures to the skull and
subdural haematomas.
Arie Alimi,
the family's lawyer, told AFP that they would be filing a formal complaint
against the authorities for violence against "a vulnerable person".
The region's governor would be named in the lawsuit, to be submitted on Monday.
"The
police charge was very violent," he said. "Mrs Legay ... has been
very badly injured." But contrary to some reports, she was in a stable
condition and not in a coma, he added.
Photos and
video footage from Saturday's protest showed her carrying a rainbow-coloured
flag with the word "peace" written on it.
Legay is an
activist with the social justice campaign group Attac. The group published a
message on its website calling for an inquiry to establish who was responsible
for her injuries.
Demos restricted
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Riot police
forced protesters out of Garibaldi Square in Nice city centre, where
demonstrations had been banned (AFP Photo/Valery HACHE)
|
Demos restricted
Both local
prosecutors and France's justice minister Sunday pointed out that protests in
some parts of the city centre had been banned.
The
minister. Nicole Belloubet, was asked about the incident in an interview with
French channel BFMTV.
While
wishing Legay a speedy recovery, she said, ""I do find it curious all
the same that when a demonstration had been banned, as was the case in Nice,
someone goes with the declared intention of demonstrating in that place
there."
"There
were some areas, in some cities, where demonstrations were banned. Following
warnings, a person who stays there is likely to commit a crime and it is in
this context that the events happened."
Nice
prosecutor Jean-Michel Pretre said they were doing everything they could to
find out what happened.
"When
you stay in a protest after the regulatory (police) warning that people have to
disperse, it's a crime."
In Legay's
case however, it was not clear whether she had been in the banned area, or on
the edge of it, when police moved against the protesters.
Demonstrations
this weekend were also banned in certain parts of Paris and in the centres of
Toulouse, Bordeaux, Dijon and Rennes.
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Vandals and
looters have left a trial of destruction on the margins of France's
'yellow
vest' protests (AFP Photo/Sylvain THOMAS)
|
2,000
convictions
French
courts so far have convicted around 2,000 "yellow vest" protesters of
offences since the marches began last November, Belloubet told BFMTV.
"Of
the 2,000 convictions that have already taken place, the figure that should be
retained is that 40 percent are prison sentences," she said. They ranged
from one month to three years, according to justice ministry figures.
The other 60
percent of convictions involved community service, suspended sentences or other
non-custodial sentences, the minister added.
Nearly
1,800 cases arising from the protests, in Paris and other French cities every
Saturday since November 17, were still to be resolved and a total of 8,700
people had been detained, she said.
More than
40,000 people took to the streets across France on Saturday for the 19th
consecutive week of anti-government protests, Interior Minister Christophe
Castaner said.
The
government redeployed soldiers from its Sentinelle anti-terror force to guard
public buildings in Paris, freeing up 6,000 police in Paris to tackle any
flare-ups of violence.



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