French hate crimes spiked following Gaza war

French police recorded 8,500 crimes and misdemeanors “committed because of the ethnicity, nationality, supposed race or religion” of the victim across 2023, the Interior Ministry’s statistics service said. (AFP)
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Updated 20 March 2024
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French hate crimes spiked following Gaza war

  • The statisticians highlighted “a marked acceleration toward the end of the year”

PARIS: Racist, xenophobic and religion-based hate crimes surged 32 percent in France last year, government figures showed on Wednesday, with a spike following the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza on Oct. 7.

Police recorded 8,500 crimes and misdemeanors “committed because of the ethnicity, nationality, supposed race or religion” of the victim across 2023, the Interior Ministry’s statistics service said.

The statisticians highlighted “a marked acceleration toward the end of the year.”

There were twice as many crimes and misdemeanors recorded in October-December as in the same period in 2022.

“The increase can be seen from October, with a level of offenses holding at the same high level in November before falling back in December,” the report said.

France’s Representative Council of Jewish Institutions had said in January that it recorded four times as many anti-Semitic acts last year as in 2022, at 1,676, with an “explosion” in numbers after Oct. 7.

Men, people aged 25 to 54, and citizens of African countries were especially targeted, it added. But only 4 percent of the victims filed a criminal complaint.


Sweden’s death toll from storm rises to three

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Sweden’s death toll from storm rises to three

HELSINKI: The death toll in Sweden rose to three after a storm battered Scandinavia Saturday and overnight, with thousands still without power on Sunday.
The storm, dubbed Johannes in Sweden, swept over large parts of the northern half of the country and western parts of Finland.
A man in his 60s who had been working in the forest was hit by a falling tree on Saturday in Hofors in Sweden, police said on Sunday.
He later died of his injuries in the hospital.
The fatality adds to the two reported on Saturday: a man in his 50s died at the hospital after also being hit by a falling tree near the Kungsberget ski resort in central Sweden, Mats Lann of Gavleborg police told AFP.
Further north, regional utility Hemab said that one of its employees had died in an accident “in the field.”
Broadcaster SVT reported that the worker had also been caught under a falling tree.
Strong gusts toppled trees, disrupted traffic and caused large power outages in Sweden and Finland.
In Finland, more than 85,000 homes were still without power around 12 am local time (10 gmt) on Sunday after a peak of over 180,000.
Energy companies warned the reparation work might take several days.
Meanwhile, Swedish news agency TT reported that at least 40,000 Swedish homes were still left without electricity on Sunday morning.