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.


Dozens of migrants brought to Malta after boat capsizes

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Dozens of migrants brought to Malta after boat capsizes

  • The group was rescued by Maltese armed forces boats and landed in Bugibba
  • The migrants could be seen huddled in blankets

VALLETTA: Some 60 African migrants were brought to Malta on Friday after their boat capsized close to the Mediterranean island, one of the biggest groups to arrive in recent years.
The group was rescued by Maltese armed forces boats and landed in Bugibba, 10 miles north of Valletta. Eyewitnesses said several ambulances and many police were on the site.
The migrants could be seen huddled in blankets. Some were carried away on stretchers. Rescue officials said one of the arrivals was in poor medical condition.
Migrant arrivals on small boats in Malta have become relatively rare, with just over 200 coming in 2024 compared to more than 2,000 in 2020. Most leave from Libya, heading for Italy.
During a meeting in Malta on November 29, home affairs ministers from Cyprus, Greece, Italy, Spain and Malta declared that strengthening relations with countries of origin and transit was “key” to addressing irregular migration.
Maltese Home Affairs Minister Byron Camilleri said during the meeting: “Our position is to save people. If you deserve asylum, you will get it. If not, then you will be sent back.”
Most of Malta’s migrant arrivals now come to the island on flights from Italy, overstay and work irregularly.
Malta has been working with Libya to prevent migrant departures and has provided training for its coast guard. Camilleri told the ministers in November that every sea voyage taken by irregular asylum seekers carried a risk of death, thus, “by working with Libya and preventing crossings, we are also saving lives.”
“Europe must be the one to decide who comes in,” he said.