A 20-kilogram blend of industrial-strength ammonium nitrate, sugar, and acetone peroxide explodes in the cherished Place de la VendĆ“me in central Paris. The bomb, assembled by a far-left terrorist cell, sets off hundreds of meters of destruction, felling the squareās famed column and damaging many of the surrounding government buildings, including the Ministry of Justice.
None of this has happened, of course. Itās one scenario sketched outāon a speculative color-graded map, no lessāby the Paris police departmentās explosives expert on October 11, one week into Franceās first far-left anti-terrorism trial since the 1990s. (The infamous Tarnac 9 case of 2008 was never actually brought to trial for terrorism and ended with a full acquittal 10 years later.)
The defendants of the so-called āaffaire du 8 dĆ©cembreāāa reference to their 2020 arrest dateāhad no identifiable plan whatsoever to commit acts of violence against state institutions. Seven people are currently implicated, facing charges of association de malfaiteurs terroristes (association of terrorist criminals, AMT), or as the judge read out on October 3, in the vague language of Franceās anti-terrorism laws, of āparticipat[ing] in a grouping or pact formed with a view to committing acts of terrorism.ā (ā¦) MT charges are the bread and butter of Franceās anti-terrorism laws, yet critics note that they transfer the burden of proof onto defendants. The accused are being judged not for concrete acts but for intentions attributed to them. āItās not so much about the substance of the facts,ā says Laurent Bonelli, a sociologist of terrorism and radicalization. With an AMT, āthe job of investigators and prosecutors is to connect the dots, to tell a plausible story that can back up the hypothesis of terrorist conspiracy. They have to write a realistic fiction.ā At what point can one ascribe criminal intentions to a joke about killing a police officer? Simon was grilled on October 6 for a February 2020 conversation in which Florian said of the police, āThey kill us. They mutilate us,ā before imagining what heād do if a hypothetical police officer was pushed over by a crowd of demonstrators. āIād kick him in the face,ā said Simon, to which Florian replied, āNah, Iād kill him.ā Dumbfounded, Simon explained to the judge: āItās sad to say, but put two drunk leftists in a van and this is what you get. The words donāt really mean much.ā
Even if drunken conversations putting the world to rights could really be considered evidence, the trial dossier is riddled with inconsistencies, as the groupās defense counsel has painstakingly pointed out. āYou really have to watch out on YouTube,ā the case file erroneously cites Florian as having saidāimplying he suspected they were being surveilledāwhich the defense corrected to ātake a look on YouTube.ā Three weeks into the trial, and police investigators have still not testified before the court. There are long gaps and an apparently cherry-picked narrative; excerpts hours apart are read in court as if from the same conversation.
According to the case file: āAt 10.05pm, after a disconnected conversation, [Florian] cited the necessity of guerrilla struggle: āMy absolute priority in life, at the moment, is thatā¦ Yeah Iām on itā¦ But being two isnāt enough. You have to think of it as war.ā Of his romantic life, Florian said: āI always told [my girlfriend], Iām not in a couple, the absolute priority is the cause, youāll always be second to that.ā CEOs should keep in mind that they could ātake a bullet,ā Simon had joked half an hour earlier, alluding to the 1986 assassination of Renault CEO Georges Besse by the far-left militant group Action Directe. āWeāre only discussing the recordings that were transcribed by investigators,ā Kempf told The Nation. āIāve calculated that over the whole period between February and Decemberā¦the prosecutor has taken 0.72 percent of the daily life of my client. Theyāre taking a few isolated conversations at specific moments where heās making explosives and talking with friends about violent protests.ā
Indeed, as the defendants have taken the stand, it would seem that their activism, lifestyle, and class position is whatās on trial. Irregular employment histories, involvement in ecological activism and land occupations, itinerant lifestyles (living in vans or squats), being a vegetarian, being a previous victim of police violence, writing a masterās thesis in literature about representations of war, involvement in a punk scene: These are all things the prosecution has raised in its attempt to make terrorists of the seven defendants.
(ā¦) Politically, the trial of the December 8 group is about dusting off Franceās anti-terrorism statutes to target activists on the left. GĆ©rald Darmanin, President Emmanuel Macronās draconian interior minister, has waged a concerted campaign to harass left-wing groups deemed āanti-republicanā and āseparatist.ā The defendants in this case were arrested amid protests over Darmaninās controversial global security law, which sought to increase police impunity amid a media campaign about threats to officersā safety. Franceās State Council, the highest administrative court, will soon rule on Darmaninās order to dissolve the environmentalist collective Les SoulĆØvements de la Terre, a group he has accused of āecoterrorism.ā In an October 5 parliamentary hearing on violent political groups, he boasted that as many as 10,000 individuals associated with the far left are currently being followed by French intelligence services.
āAnti-terrorist justice has always been in lockstep with the political humors of the day,ā says Bonelli. The acquittal of the Tarnac 9 was an embarrassing defeat for officials in Franceās anti-terrorist hierarchy. Whatās striking to observers this time around is that the stateās sensationalistic case seems even weaker.
āFor the two weeks Iāve been at this trial, what have we seen? A group of benevolent, humane people whoāve done things that, yes, are not exactly legal, but that have nothing to do with terrorism,ā says Olive, Camilleās father.
Hearings are slated to draw to a close by October 27, with an initial verdict expected shortly thereafter.
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Itās not the first time they make a ridiculous trial like this, nothing sticks in court but the trial is the āsentenceā. 18 months in isolation in a jail before the trial even begin. There will be no condamnation but they had to go trought this, it sets an example for people who consider alternatives way of lifes.
The point is to keep everyone in line, ruling by fear, probably because they expect times of chaos. These cham trials are stress tests of how fucked up a state can be to keep peoplesā head down.
The fascists militias are not so much considered a threat, they share the same values and the level of violence is the same as cops, just the uniform is different. They do the dirty job police can not (yet) do in the open. If the political presure to end far-right terror is too strong there is always the option to throw these dumb fucks under the bus, disolve these organizations, have a speech on āHitler was nasty and nazis shall not rise againā, and start fresh. The french state fears the ungovernable ones and these are not far-right.