French policeman to go on trial over 2023 killing of teen that sparked riots

Attendees hold a banner reading “Justice for Nahel,” during a commemoration march for a teenage driver shot dead by a policeman, in the Pablo Picasso area of the Parisian suburb of Nanterre, on Jun. 29, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 03 June 2025
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French policeman to go on trial over 2023 killing of teen that sparked riots

  • The trial of the officer could take place in the second or third quarter of 2026
  • “This order for a trial is both disappointing and not surprising,” said the officer’s lawyer

PARIS: The French policeman who shot and killed a teenager at point-blank range in 2023 outside Paris, sparking days of riots, is to go on trial on a murder charge, a court and prosecutors said Tuesday.

The trial of the officer, who has been charged with the murder of Nahel M., 17, could take place in the second or third quarter of 2026, the court and prosecutor in the Paris suburb of Nanterre where the killing took place said in a joint statement.

The officer, identified as Florian M., was released from custody in November 2023 after five months in detention.

Mobile footage of him shooting Nahel inside a car during a traffic control on a busy street went viral. The anger sparked protests that degenerated into rioting and led to scenes of devastation nationwide.

The police initially maintained that Nahel had driven his car at the officer but this was
contradicted by the video, which showed two officers standing outside a stationary car, with one pointing a weapon at its driver.

“This order for a trial is both disappointing and not surprising,” said Laurent-Franck Lienard, the officer’s lawyer.

“The investigating judge would have had to be courageous to take a different position than that of the prosecution” which pushed for the trial, the lawyer told AFP, adding that he would lodge an appeal against the order.

“We maintain that the shooting was legitimate,” he said.

Frank Berton, the lawyer for Nahel’s mother, expressed his “satisfaction” over the move.

“We are just seeing the law being applied... Now all that remains is to convince the court,” he said.

The move to try the officer over the death of Nahel, who was of north African origin, comes against the background of new tensions in France over racism and security.

A man who had posted racist videos shot dead his Tunisian neighbor and badly wounded a Turkish man in the south of France at the weekend, and a Malian man was stabbed to death in a mosque in April.

Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau, who is taking an increasingly hard line on immigration issues, has faced accusations of not taking a strong enough stance against such crimes and even fueling a racist climate.

But he said Monday that “every racist act is an anti-French act.”


Indian forces kill Maoist rebel leader: police

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Indian forces kill Maoist rebel leader: police

  • New Delhi has launched an all-out campaign against the insurgents and vowed to end the Maoist rebellion by March 2026
  • Police in the eastern state of Odisha said they had killed Maoist commander Ganesh Uike in a gunfight

BHUBANESWAR, India: Indian security forces killed a senior Maoist rebel commander and three other fighters including two women in a raid on Thursday, police said, as authorities push a major offensive against the guerrillas.
New Delhi has launched an all-out campaign against the insurgents and vowed to end the Maoist rebellion by March 2026.
Police in the eastern state of Odisha said they had killed Maoist commander Ganesh Uike in a gunfight in Kandhamal district, after security forces received a tip-off about his location.
Uike, 69, the leader of the Maoist rebels in the coastal state, had a bounty of more than $120,000 on his head.
“Four dead bodies of Maoists” were recovered following the gunfight, top state police officer Yogesh Bahadur Khurania said, identifying one of them as Uike.
Khurania said that the other three — two women and a man — were also rebel fighters, adding that their identities were being ascertained.
There were no casualties among the security forces.
Two Maoist fighters were killed in the same state on Wednesday.
India has been cracking down on the remnants of the Naxalite rebellion, named after the village in the Himalayan foothills where the Maoist-inspired insurgency began nearly six decades ago.
The rebellion once controlled nearly a third of the country, with an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 fighters at its peak in the mid-2000s, but it has been dramatically weakened in recent years.
Since 2024, over 500 Maoist rebels have been killed, according to the Indian government.