A year after Nahel Merzouk was killed by police during a “stop” operation he was trying to escape, this Saturday several hundred people gathered in the area where the young man grew up and lived to once again demand justice.
On June 27, 2023, at 8:18 am, 17-year-old Nahel Merzouk, of Algerian origin, was forced to stop during Operation Stop in Nanterre, on the outskirts of Paris, from which he was trying to escape, ending up being shot dead by the police.
The incident sparked a wave of protests in the suburbs of Paris and in several cities in France, which included hundreds of damaged buildings, thousands of burned cars and physical attacks on mayors, leading to the cancellation of several holidays and the mobilization of about 45 people. thousands of police to control the riots.
This Saturday, just over a year later, Naël’s mother organised a silent march in Nanterre, accompanied by several hundred people who held placards reading “The police will kill”, “Let’s abolish the police” and, above all, “Justice for Naël”.
In Lus, 16-year-old Mahmoud said that despite not having met Nahel, he decided to join a silent march organised by his family to “demand justice”, regretting that the agent who killed the young man only spent “two or three months in prison.”
“We are here to say that we want the truth to come out and this agent to be sentenced to life in prison,” said Mahmoud, wearing a white shirt with the words “Justice for Nahel, executed on 06/27/2023.” “.
Florian, the 38-year-old agent who fired the bullet that killed Nael, was in custody for five months and was finally released from prison in November 2023, and is now under judicial control and prohibited from carrying a weapon.
“A year later, I came here to show that we are still here, that what happened was very shocking and still worries us a lot,” he tells Lusa Sirinn, a member of the Europa Ecology Os Verdes party (EELV, for its acronym in French), who came to the march holding a sign that read “the death penalty has been abolished, but we still fear for our lives.”
“My younger brothers are victims of police violence every week, and I am always afraid, especially after Nael’s death, that one of them will become the next Nael. So it is very important for us to be here,” says Sirinn.
On the same streets where there were burned-out cars and smashed windows a year earlier, many of these young people now believe that the protests have shown the government the power that popular areas can wield.
“The movement changed the balance of power, despite the repression. There were many young people who were detained, which also prevented the expansion of the movement, but even so, the movement was much more powerful than in 2005,” he says. Lusa Buna, member of the United Front for Immigration dos Bairros Populares.
On the eve of the first round of legislative elections, which polls suggest should give a majority to the National Union (Rassemblement National, in French) – Myriam, 36, believes that the movement of a year ago had a “big impact” and, given what is going to happen in France, it will still have a double or triple impact.”
“We are all waiting for the results of the legislative elections and we know that the National Union is at the gates of power and this puts even more pressure on us,” he said.
At the end of the march, in which they heard slogans such as “we are all anti-fascists” and “until there is justice, there is no peace,” Nael’s mother took the microphone to emphasize that her son “was executed.” and demand justice.
“I want the word justice to illuminate my son’s memory.” It’s very difficult for me to realize that two policemen [envolvidos na morte do jovem] “out there somewhere, and I could walk down the street and meet them. This is what tears me apart, and I only want one thing: justice,” he said.
Author: Lusa
Source: CM Jornal

I am Michael Melvin, an experienced news writer with a passion for uncovering stories and bringing them to the public. I have been working in the news industry for over five years now, and my work has been published on multiple websites. As an author at 24 News Reporters, I cover world section of current events stories that are both informative and captivating to read.