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Remembering the 1961 Paris Massacre

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Remembering the 1961 Paris Massacre - Ilm Feed
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On 17 October 1961, 30,000 French-Algerians held a protest in the French capital, Paris in support of peace talks to end their country’s war of independence against France which had occupied Algeria since 1830.

Despite a curfew imposed against “French Muslims from Algeria” since October 5, protesters gathered near the Seine river calling for peace but the night would come to a violent end when French police violently moved in to break up the protest opening fire and attacking the protesters with truncheons and rifle-butts.

Protesters were herded onto the iconic Saint-Michel bridge and beaten. Bodies were thrown into the Seine river with many still alive and handcuffed drowning to death. Eyewitnesses describe how the river became filled with corpses and bodies continued to wash up onto the shores for weeks after.

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Tagged on the Saint-Michel Bridge in 1961: “Ici on noie les Algériens” (“Here we drown Algerians”).


The grim event which took place around iconic national monuments, including the Eiffel Tower and Notre Dame Cathedral would later come to be known as the Paris Massacre.

The extent of the massacre was denied by French officials for many years with the official death toll put at 3 but a government commission carried out after 37 years in 1998 concluded that 40 protesters were killed. This figure is disputed by historians who put the death toll at more than 200.

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Raymond Darolle / Europress

In 2012, it was the first time a French president publicly accepted that the massacre of Algerians took place when French president François Hollande said in a a statement,

“On October 17, 1961, Algerians who were protesting for independence were killed in a bloody repression. The Republic recognises these facts with lucidity…I pay homage to victims 51 years later.”

Maurice Papon, chief of Paris police at the time who personally supervised the events of October 17, falsely insisted that Algerians fired on the police to blame the violence on the protesters. He was never convicted for the Paris massacre but was convicted in 1998 for a different crime.

Algeria would receive independence a year later after but this day is still remembered by Algerians as a day when peaceful protesters were violently quelled by the former occupiers of their homeland.

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@Akheilos @Zarvan @Aslan @Desert Fox @Saiful Islam @Al-zakir @hinduguy
 
Debunking the myths of the "1961 paris massacre".

October 17, 1961, when Paris was held in an alleged massacre Medico Legal Institute (Morgue) recorded no body entry "NA" (NA = North African in the terminology of the time) .

October 17, 1961, from 7:30 p.m. to 11 p.m., there was only one victim in the scope of the event and it was not an Algerian, but a French named Guy Chevallier, killed around 21h near the REX cinema skull smashed. By who ?

On October 18, at 4:00 am,Maurice Legay the Director General of the Paris police learned that there was was therefore 3 deaths. We are far from the "dozens or hundreds drowned poor algerians".

Certainly, we are told,that corpses were deposited at the morgue the following day. Wrong, because it is not indicated by the archives of the Medico Legal Institute in Paris. Since between 18 and October 21, "only" 4 corpses of "NA" were admitted to the Morgue:

October 18, Belkacem Achour killed by a policeman invoking self-defense and Abdelkader Benhamar died in a traffic accident.
October 20, Amar Malek shot dead by a Gendarme .
October 21 Ramdane Mehani, died in unknown circumstances.


We are far from the 100, 200 or even 300 dead "victims of repression" advanced by some and for which Mr Hollande has recognized the responsibility of France!


It is essential to know the truth, to recall the multiple killings by the FLN against the French police in the weeks preceding the event on 17 October 1961 and the repression that has been the unfortunate consequence.

These murders marked the beginning of five weeks that saw 10 policemen being killed. The wave of attacks in September and October 1961 will be of a magnitude that had never known. Seven police officers will be victims in September. 1961 is the deadliest year for the Paris police, between August 29 and October 3, during 33 separate attacks, the FLN commandos killed 13 policemen more than the annual total for previous years.

Thus, the only massacre that took place during this dark time, and whose reality is uncontested by official documents, is that of the French policemen. !!


Guerre d'Algérie : Rétablissons la vérité sur le massacre du 17 octobre 1961 - FNCV Infos et Actualités des Combattants Volontaires

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The Prefect expressing condolences to the widow of a police officer killed by the FLN.

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when peaceful protesters were violently quelled by the former occupiers of their homeland.
This happened everywhere around the world....It was considered a norm from the British doing the same to their colonies and even the Spanish! But when what they taught their colonies is reciprocated just because the colonies are not colonizers there is a widespread of phobia that Karma will come and bite hard and before that happens lets wrap ourselves in another layer of phobia?!
 

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