French lawmakers back police shootings law dubbed 'licence to kill' by critics


FILE PHOTO: A woman walks past a car, burnt during nights of unrest following the death of Nahel, a 17-year-old teenager killed by a French police officer in Nanterre during a traffic stop, at Saint-Eloy neighbourhood in Woippy, suburb of the French city of Metz, France, July 5, 2023. REUTERS/Horaci Garcia/File Photo

PARIS, July 8 (Reuters) - French ⁠lawmakers have approved a proposed law that would give police officers involved in shootings the benefit ⁠of the doubt, which critics have dubbed a "licence to kill".

The proposition, a longstanding demand ‌of the far-right, would mean that officers who killed someone by shooting would be presumed to have acted within the limits of the law, unless there was proof to the contrary.

The lawwas approved by 313 votes to 199 in the lower house of ​parliament, the National Assembly, on Tuesday evening. The government has lent ⁠its support to the law, which still ⁠needs to be voted on by the upper house.

The number of fatal shootings by police in France ⁠is ‌among the highest in Europe and rising. The agencies that carry out investigations of police in France, the IGPN and IGGN, recorded 69 people killed by police or gendarmerie officers in 2024, ⁠compared with 49 in 2023 and 50 in 2022.

Proponents of the ​law, including interior minister Laurent ‌Nunez, say it is an important measure to protect police officers who work in dangerous conditions. ⁠Critics say it ​will lead to more killings and deny justice to victims' families.

Marie-Laure Geoffray of Amnesty International said that the law would slow down investigations into police violence and that the burden of proof would fall on the families of victims.

Defending ⁠the law, Nunez told parliament "it does not lead to penal ​irresponsibility — at any moment, if the circumstances are reunited, any prosecutor can reverse this presumption".

The French government has come under pressure from activists and the public over repeated allegations of police violence and harassment, largely against Black ⁠and Arab men and boys, with some cases, such as the killing of 17-year-old Nahel Merzouk in 2023, sparking nationwide riots.

A 2017 law expanded the scenarios in which police officers could use their firearms to include when they were unable to stop a vehicle, which academics found led to a fivefold rise in ​the number of fatal police shootings involving moving vehicles.

"There will be more ⁠deaths — if you authorise someone to use their firearm with the idea that they won't be accountable, then ​they will just shoot," said Pouria Amirshahi, a left-wing lawmaker. "This law ‌grantspolice impunity."

More than 360,000 people have signed a petition ​against the law on the National Assembly website launched by Issam El Khalfaoui, whose son was shot dead by a police officer in 2021.

(Reporting by Layli Foroudi; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Trump says deal with Iran is over, to cut trade with NATO ally Spain
Spanish Cardinal suspends himself after sexual assault allegations
Trump says at NATO summit he has ordered cutoff of US trade with Spain
Russia tries to jam Musk's Starlink systems to counter Ukrainian drones
Political survivor Le Pen makes her boldest gamble yet for France's presidency
Taiwan's migrating crab population rebounds thanks to safer road crossings
Russia launches third air attack on Kyiv in a week, officials say
Flash: Switzerland beats Colombia to reach World Cup quarterfinals
Argentina completes stunning comeback against Egypt to reach World Cup quarterfinals (updated)
Guimaraes accepts blame for Brazil World Cup exit

Others Also Read