French MPs tackle controversial clampdown on filming police
 
 
The French parliament begins a debate Tuesday on
legislation that would sharply curtail the publication of images of police
officers in action, a move denounced by free speech advocates and critics of
alleged police brutality.
France's security forces have long been accused of
heavy-handed tactics when dealing with protesters, but also when stopping or
arresting individuals, in particular black or Arab minorities.
A series of incidents caught on video have spurred
calls for reform, which gained momentum in the wake of the "Black Lives
Matter" movement in the US following the death of George Floyd.
Police counter that they are increasingly under
threat as they struggle to carry out President Emmanuel Macron's promise to
reduce crime and insecurity, especially in the rough housing blocks surrounding
Paris and other cities.
An attack on a police station outside Paris last
month, by dozens of people armed with fireworks and steel bars, galvanised the
government to vow concrete measures to protect officers and improve working
conditions.
A new "global security" law proposed by
Macron's centrist government initially focused on reforms such as giving more
autonomy to local police -- and potentially arming more of them -- and
expanding the use of surveillance drones in high-crime areas.
But last month, his rightwing interior minister
Gerard Darmanin supported a measure long sought by police unions, making it a
crime to show images of an officer's face unless it has been made blurry.
Publication on social media or elsewhere with the
intent of undermining an officer's "physical or psychological
integrity" could be punished by a year in prison or fines of up to 45,000
euros ($53,000).
Darmanin says the measure would "protect those
who are protecting us," especially in poor neighbourhoods where tensions
often run high between law enforcement and immigrant communities.
The law's co-author Jean-Michel Fauvergue, a former
head of France's elite RAID police unit, called the limits on police images a
response to a "war of images" that "the authorities, and the
state in particular, are losing".
Opponents argue the stricter rules would effectively
remove a key tool for police accountability just as officials are facing calls
for increased oversight.
Media groups have also denounced what they call a
"gag law" similar to a measure in force in Spain since 2015, which
could lead to self-censorship when dealing with police images.
An open letter this month signed by journalists
across France, including some from Agence France-Presse, urged lawmakers to
reject the new image limits, and protests have been called for outside
parliament on Tuesday.
"There's reason to fear that officers who
already often try to prevent filming or photographs of their interventions in
public areas, including through the use of force -- despite it being perfectly
legal -- will feel even more empowered to do so," they wrote.
Hundreds of violence complaints were filed against
officers during the "yellow vest" anti-government rallies that
erupted in 2018, which saw fierce clashes between protesters and police that
made headlines worldwide.
In July, three officers were charged with
manslaughter over the death of a delivery man, Cedric Chouviat, who was filmed
by bystanders as officers had him in a chokehold after his arrest for a traffic
offence near the Eiffel Tower.
Chouviat said "I'm suffocating" seven
times before his body went limp, in a similar scenario to the "I can't
breathe" uttered by George Floyd, the black American who also died after
being pinned to the ground last May.
Floyd's death prompted mass protests against alleged
police violence in France, particularly over the 2016 death in custody of a
24-year-old black man, Adama Traore.
Medical experts have exonerated the officers who
arrested Traore, but his family has contested the findings, saying he was a
victim of choking.
France's human rights auditor has also warned of
"considerable risks" from the new law, saying it "must not
impede on freedom of the press, nor on freedom of information."
"The publication of images regarding police interventions are legitimate and necessary for a democracy to function," the Defenseur des Droits said.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


