French Parliament Calls for Commemorating Assassination of Algerians 63 Years Ago in Paris

A number of Algerians were arrested in Puteaux, west of Paris, during the protests of October 17, 1967 (AFP)
A number of Algerians were arrested in Puteaux, west of Paris, during the protests of October 17, 1967 (AFP)
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French Parliament Calls for Commemorating Assassination of Algerians 63 Years Ago in Paris

A number of Algerians were arrested in Puteaux, west of Paris, during the protests of October 17, 1967 (AFP)
A number of Algerians were arrested in Puteaux, west of Paris, during the protests of October 17, 1967 (AFP)

Sixty-three years ago, 30,000 Algerians who came to demonstrate peacefully in Paris were subjected to violent repression, leaving many people dead and injured.

Historians say “at least dozens” of people were killed as a result of police violence. The French Parliament is scheduled to discuss, on Thursday, a draft resolution supported by President Emmanuel Macron’s party, demanding that the government allocate a day to commemorate this massacre.

On Oct. 17, 1967, six months before the Evian Accords established Algeria’s independence from France, the “French-Algerian Muslims,” as they were called at the time, flocked from poor neighborhoods in the suburbs and popular neighborhoods in Paris, where they lived.

At the invitation of the French branch of the National Liberation Front, an Algerian political party, they defied a ban imposed by police director Maurice Papon, who was later convicted in 1998 of complicity in crimes against humanity for his role in the deportation of Jews between 1942 and 1944.

These demonstrators faced the most fatal repression in Western Europe since 1945, according to historian Emmanuel Blanchard. On that day, the police arrested about 12,000 demonstrators. Bodies with multiple bullet wounds or signs of beating were recovered from the Seine River in the following days. In 1988, an advisor to the Prime Minister’s Office during the Algerian War estimated that police “attacks” had killed about 100 people, while a government report in 1998 counted 48 deaths.

In a declassified archive, published by the French website Mediapart in 2022, a memorandum from a high-ranking official, who worked as an advisor to Charles de Gaulle, dated October 28, 1961, states that there were 54 dead. The toll presented by historians over the years ranged between 30 and more than 200 deceased.

Blanchard recalls that as soon as the first demonstrators began arriving at Neuilly Bridge, west of Paris, security forces fatally shot a quiet crowd, which included families. The violence of police officers increased when they heard radio messages published by the police falsely announcing that officers had been shot dead. Shooting operations also occurred in several places in the capital.

These violations were not recognized until 2012, when then-French President François Hollande, commemorated for the first time the “memory of the victims of the bloody repression” to which they were subjected while they were demonstrating for the “right to independence.” In 2021, Emmanuel Macron spoke of “unforgiveable crimes” committed “under the authority of Maurice Papon.”



Syria’s Al-Qusayr Celebrates Eid al-Fitr without Hezbollah for First Time in Years

People perform Eid Al-Fitr prayers in Al-Qusayr. (Sami Volunteer Team)
People perform Eid Al-Fitr prayers in Al-Qusayr. (Sami Volunteer Team)
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Syria’s Al-Qusayr Celebrates Eid al-Fitr without Hezbollah for First Time in Years

People perform Eid Al-Fitr prayers in Al-Qusayr. (Sami Volunteer Team)
People perform Eid Al-Fitr prayers in Al-Qusayr. (Sami Volunteer Team)

Amid the devastation, thousands of residents of Syria’s Al-Qusayr performed Eid Al-Fitr prayers in the northern district square—the site where the city’s first protest against President Bashar al-Assad’s rule erupted in 2011.

For the first time in Al-Qusayr’s history, Eid prayers were held in a public square. It was also the first mass gathering of residents in an open space in 13 years, following a war that destroyed 70% of the city, displaced its people, and led to its capture by Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Syrian regime forces.

Al-Qusayr, a region located near the Lebanese border, was once Hezbollah’s most significant stronghold in Syria. The group withdrew after the fall of the Syrian regime in December, but its loyalists and affiliated locals remained, along with residents of several border villages that have seen sporadic clashes in recent months.

The most intense fighting occurred in February, when Syrian forces launched a military operation that pushed them into Lebanese territory and deployed troops to seal off illegal border crossings.

Tensions flared again two weeks ago after Syrian soldiers were killed in the border region, triggering an exchange of artillery fire between the two sides.

The clashes left casualties on both ends and forced the displacement of border village residents before a ceasefire was reached with the Lebanese army.

The agreement included the closure of four illegal crossings in an effort to curb the smuggling of weapons and drugs, a trade that has flourished over the past decade under the former regime.

As soon as the regime fell, refugees from Al-Qusayr living in Lebanese camps began returning to their hometown. Hundreds arrived to find their homes completely destroyed, forcing them to set up tents beside the ruins while they rebuilt or searched for alternative housing.

The residents of Al-Qusayr resumed their communal Eid traditions after Ramadan. (Sami Volunteer Team)

The large turnout for Eid prayers underscored the scale of the return.

Journalist Ahmed al-Qasir, who recently came back, estimated that about 65% of those displaced have now returned. Before the uprising, Al-Qusayr had a population of around 150,000, he told Asharq Al-Awsat.

Shahin, 30, who returned in 2018, described the city as a wasteland at the time, despite some 20,000 people having already come back.

“Hezbollah, regime militias, and smugglers controlled the area. There were no real markets, just small shops. Everything was in ruins—schools, clinics, hospitals,” he said.

Residents had to travel 30 kilometers to Homs for basic necessities, enduring regime checkpoints that extorted money along the way.

With the fall of Assad’s regime and Hezbollah’s withdrawal, life in Al-Qusayr has slowly begun to return to normal. Since the start of Ramadan, markets have reopened despite widespread destruction, poverty, and hardship.

On the eve of Eid, the city’s streets buzzed with late-night shopping, Shahin noted.

“Al-Qusayr is finally regaining its role as the region’s commercial hub,” he said.

According to a survey by the Sami Volunteer Team, more than 30,000 refugees returned to Al-Qusayr and its countryside within the first month of the regime’s collapse.

That number is believed to have doubled over the past four months, and team organizers expect it to rise further once the school year ends.

Zaid Harba, a member of the 40-person volunteer group, said most returnees came from refugee camps in Lebanon, while fewer arrived from displacement camps in northern Syria.

Many families there are waiting for the academic year to conclude before arranging their return.