#Sainte-Soline
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kropotkindersurprise · 2 years ago
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March 25, 2023 - 30.000 water defenders descended on the mega-bassin at Sainte-Soline, France, to stop the privatization of ground- and rainwater for the benefit of corporate agriculture.
In the pitched battle with riot police 200 protesters were injured, 40 of whom seriously, with police shooting tear gas grenades at head height and heavy use of explosive grenades. One protester, Serge, is still in a coma and fighting for his life after a police grenade exploded next to his head. [video]/[video]/[video]
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pissed-french-citizen · 2 years ago
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Ok guys, things are going BAD AND WORST EVERYDAY
Yesterday, on Saturday 26 of March, 2023, what we can call a civil war happened in Sainte-Soline, Deux-Sèvres, France.
A freaking good exemple of "what is legal is not necessarily legit".
Here, from the French human right ligue :
"We noted several cases of obstruction by the forces of law and order to the intervention of the emergency services, both ambulance and fire brigade."
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Green activist were having a congress about ecology and how to build a virtuous agricultural model that respects people and biodiversity.
The project :
https://bassinesnonmerci.fr/index.php/les-bassines-cest-quoi/
Build 16 mega-basin, the biggest one having a 720 billions litres capacity (720 000 000 l.) on 16 hectares of land, with 8 meters high embankment.
The water to fill those basins will be pomp in groundwaters(into the grounds or rivers),it will NOT be rainwater.
This water will be use to irrigate CORN, which don't naturally grow in this part of the world.
This corn will be grown to be exported, or make biogaz, but not to feed animals and humans.
Only 12 farms will benefit of it.
FRENCH PEOPLE are paying for it : since access to water is ALL PUBLIC SERVICE here, and the state is spending 60 billions euros for that, but is NOT the owner of the farms, the state will NEVER have its money back and the French people will never eat that corn.
ON TOP OF THAT most of the country is facing an historical WINTER DROUGHT.
So green activist, farmers and elected greens gathered on the site to protest, despite the prefecture's ban, because our planet cannot wait any longer and water should be a shared good and not for just some farmers. Anyway, our beloved (no) Minister of Home Affairs have been speaking of "how violent it will be" there, despite the ban, speaking of "1000 violents protestors awaited".
What happened :
The prefecture banned every gathering for the weekend, fearing violence as it happened in Notre-Dame-Des-Landes
People came anyway, because ecology is our best chance to survive, moreover after the last GIEC report
3000 policemen (civil) and gendarmes (military) have been sent to guard the construction site.
As you might have understood, things went bad, like REALLY bad.
4.000 grenades thrown by the state's force
3 gendarmes' véhicules burnt.
200 protestors hurt, 28 gendarmes, 5 persons in a life-threatening condition (2 protestors, 3 gendarmes)
Ambulances kept away from the field from the military, despite the injured people needing immediate medical attention.
👇This thread will show you what happened
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And now what ?
Well, protests happen EVERYDAY in France. Considering that :
how violent this protest have been,
how fast is our beloved (still no) Minister of Home Affairs to blame far-left and black blocks for every violence during protest
How he used tiredness to justify the violence of the police
How he considers undeclared protestation illegal WHICH IS ABSOLUTELY FALSE
Protests will take place all over the French territory next Tuesday
We already know that there wil be MORE policemen and gendarmes around the protests
Please PLEASE, fellow French protestors, TAKE CARE, even more if one of sainte-soline's protestor or gendarme dies by then.
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mirrorontheworld · 2 years ago
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Grièvement blessée à Sainte-Soline, une jeune femme souffre aujourd’hui d’une paralysie faciale. Le procureur de la République de Rennes a ouvert une enquête pour « violence par personne dépositaire de l’autorité publique ». Elle raconte à Mediapart son calvaire et dit surtout sa colère.
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smartfox · 2 years ago
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BASSINES NON MERCI
SAINTE-SOLINE
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culturefrancaise · 2 years ago
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Translation of the phone call : 
The lawyer of the League of Human Rights said : 
"You are forbidden from intervening ? Do you confirm you are forbidden from intervening ?" 
 The SAMU (ambulancers) : "We do not have authorisation to send help on site because it is considered dangerous to be on site". 
 "And if you don't go, wouldn't it be considered a failure to assist a person in danger ?" 
"We must keep our rescue quad safe too, unfortunately, we do not have the authorisation to send them in like that". 
And then the doctor asked the SAMU if the military doctors are on site and the SAMU replied : "The military doctors are here for the forces of order. This is their medicine service for the forces of order".
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helshades · 2 years ago
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@animentality; @odinsblog; @alfred-e-neuman; @le-dreadmau5; @evidenceofdespair...
French police kill.
French police mutilate.
French police terrorise.
I was only seven months old when he died, he was 22. He was born the same month as you, @a-room-of-my-own​, in 1964, his mother’s youngest. The night Malik Oussekine died, on 6th December 1986, it was like the whole country’s heart stopped for a moment, and then every beat it took after that was shadowed by his memory. It is impossible in France to utter the words ‘police violence’ and not hear unspoken names: Malik Oussekine. Rémi Fraisse. ZIneb Redouane. Cédric Chouviat.
And now Serge, as I write these dreadful words, lying in a hospital bed. We don’t want him to join the unspoken list. We think of him, as he shadows the beat of our heart. We grow angrier.
Malik Oussekine died for the cause of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Maybe he had the wrong sort of face, too. He hadn’t actually taken part in the demonstrations that had been shaking Paris that month, but he too was a student like the many who protested the Devaquet Bill that promised to rattle French universities. That night, Malik Oussekine simply exited his favourite jazz club when he was given chase by three ‘Flyers’, members of the dreaded motorised police squad created after the events of May 1968 to ‘clean up’ the streets by chasing down supposed rioters left over from a protest on a trail bike, one driving and the other using a long truncheon to lay blows to anyone he could reach.
There were witnesses to the crime, including a young civil servant who let Malik Oussekine enter his apartment building with him and attempted to come to his aid, but was beaten with batons as well. As he described the scene afterwards, three policemen launched themselves at the victim with inane brutality, landing great blows to his stomach and his back. In truth, when the emergency services arrived ten minutes later, Malik Oussekine was already dead; yet it was officially declared that he died in a hospital bed three hours later, to try to avert the crowd’s anger against the murderers, and the State. The truth was revealed by the Oussekine family’s sollicitor, reading a report from the head of the emergency services, four days later. Two days after Malik Oussekine died, the bill was dropped, and minister Alain Devaquet resigned, confessing to his ‘shock’ upon seeing this level of violence. Most of the political class spoke in unison to condemn the acts of those policemen. The Flying Squad was dissolved almost immediately.
Why am I telling you this?
Because there seems to be a pattern to this story, poisonous echoes to it, which began pulsing with insistence back in 2016 when the Companies républicaines de sécurité (C.R.S.) maimed several demonstrators during protests against the ‘Labour Law’, then-minister of Economy Emmanuel Macron’s pet project, which aimed to revoke many key points to the Labour Code to fragilise workers’ protection against abusive employers. Except this time, the bill became law; the following year, the young minister became a president. A year within his term, the ‘Yellow Vests’ took to the streets and the roundabouts of France. And then police repression became ferocious.
Warning: extremely graphic injuries, eye wounds, broken jaws, torn limbs, missing teeth, stitches, swelling, etc.
Le Mur jaune, 432 injured people out of 2,500 wounded accounted for amongst the ‘Yellow Vests’, 2018–2019.
When journalist David Dufresne launched his Twitter account to make an inventory of police violence in the Yellow-Vest demonstrations, the year was 2018, the month was the same as the one Malik Oussekine died. Every tweet would begin with the now infamous words: ‘Allo, place Beauvau? I’m calling to report a case of police violence...’ (« Allô, place Beauvau ? C’est pour un signalement. »). Beauvau Place being a common periphrasis to refer to the headquarters of the Ministry of the Interior—hosting the French equivalent to the British Home Secretary, or the Secretary of Homeland Security, in the U.S. (combined with the Attorney General).
‘Is it the father that cries within me? My first ever report dealt with a high-schooler from Bordeaux. The video showed a teenager lying on the ground after being shot in the face by a blast ball launched by a riot gun, and a policeman that orders the kid’s schoolmates to ‘shut the fuck up’. Two days prior, it was the 1st December protest on the Champs-Élysées and its attendant lot of badly-wounded civilians. Dozens by dozens, videos, photos and witness accounts would flow my Twitter thread. Nothing on the television; barely anything in the press. As a long-time observer of law and order maintenance, I found myself stunned, between, on the one hand, the unprecedented violence that lashes onto civilians during social demonstrations—unprecedented both in its brutality and its relentlessness—but also, on the other hand, the media silence surrounding such violence, and which, by keeping silence, gives free reign to such violence.’
David Dufresne.
Zineb Redouane was first to die in the Yellow Vest demonstrations because of police violence; yet, like Malik Oussekine, she had nothing to do with the actual protests. She was 80 years old. She died on 2nd December 2018, in a hospital bed, but she was killed by a policeman the day before, when he shot at her through her window as she was closing her shutters against the heavy clouds of teargas and the noise of the protests below. She was on the phone with one of her daughters then, who reported that her mother cried out that a policeman had aimed at her and shot at her—in her 4th floor flat. She was shot in the head with a teargas canister, and two 10-gram teargas capsules were officially found in her flat—but according to police sources speaking to reputable freelance journalists, in all likelihood, policemen cleaned up the flat from any incriminating evidence of more than one shot and of possible other types of projectiles. No policeman ever came forward to confess to the crime; none were denounced. Amnesty International has officially catalogued this affair as a case of unpunished police violence.
Do you know what changed since Malik Oussekine died? The press. The press doesn’t show police violence anymore; not most of the press, not mainstream media—90% of French press is privately owned by a dozen oligarchs, several of whom endorsed Emmanuel Macron’s first presidential campaign, paving a yellow brick media road for him which definitely led to both of his terms—and not even the public service. The words ‘police violence’ have become something of a taboo on any given television studio set. On the other hand, protesters are systematically depicted as imbecilic hordes of nationalists intent on swarming the tranquil Republic. Meanwhile, French riot police specialise in kettling peaceful demonstrations before demanding that people disperse—whilst they’re still stuck in the police-made impasse—and then gassing the helpless crowd abundantly, or beating anyone haphazardly, or even fining as many people as they can ‘to make numbers’.
It’s actually very difficult to account for all the wounded because there aren’t official numbers but one can only start from the 2019 assessment of the Yellow Vest protests and speculate on the growing numbers since especially January 2023. In March 2019, then-Chief of Police in Paris Michel Delpuech brought the Flyers back to life. His dreaded successor Didier Lallement then perfected the squad to create the ‘BRAV-M’ unit: the ‘Motorised brigade for repression of violent actions’. The initial version was understood as a short-lived affair, meant to be reconstituted only on the fly for the bigger days of protest, but Lallement made it a fixture. And the results aren’t exactly glorious.
Following David Dufresne’s numbers, the Yellow Vest wounded are between 2,000 and 3,000 (known to be injured because they reported their injuries at a hospital, in order notably to obtain a medically-sanctioned permit for a short sick leave), including over 80 severe injuries, 152 head wounds, 17 people who lost an eye as well as half a dozen blown-up hands. Some people partially lost the use of a limb, had their hearing impaired, had their teeth shattered by a blast ball in the mouth. Many people were shot almost point blank with riot guns, hundreds were gassed in the face. This is the ideal moment to inform you that the teargas used by French police is actually more concentrated than the one used by the American police. Seriously.
The Geneva Convention actually forbids usage of teargas in a military context, yet this toxic combat gas is legal for police use against civil unrest. Go figure.
Numbers are growing for the wounded, unfortunately, since January, Macron’s regime is only holding by a thread and that’s the hooligans masquerading as policemen. But this time, something has changed. The media are timidly starting to speak against him, probably under the pressure of underlings furious at their superiors for catering to the P.T.B.’s will for so long. The three quarters of the French population (95% of active workers) show prolonged support for the protesters, and refuse to welcome the official statements of ‘anarchists’ and the ‘ultra-left’ being the source of all that unrest.
Macron’s government is on its last leg and this is why police repression has taken a critical turn over the last two weeks. It all culminated on 24th March 2023 in Sainte-Soline, Deux-Sèvres, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, when 3,000 gendarmes and 200 police provoked a riot as 25,000–30,000 were come to protest the construction of one ‘megabasin’. As far as I know, over 200 protesters were injured, 40 of them severely so—we’re talking about people who had their faces shattered by police projectiles—and 2 are still in a coma.
It’s not just that gendarmes on quad bikes attacked the tail of the processions that were fleeing in panic, shooting at them with riot guns, that is raising controversy at present.
It is also the fact that the authorities prevented the emergence services from intervening on the site for several hours, even though volunteer medics who had been assisting the protesters repeatedly called the emergency services crying for help with clinical depictions of life-threatening wounds.
And then Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin lied about it, the head of the local emergency service (also an ardent support of Emmanuel Macron’s) lied about it, and then two separate newspapers releases audio recordings of the phone conversation between a volunteer doctor and emergency personnel, flatly stating that officials didn’t want them to attend to the wounded.
In passing, several (left-wing) elected representatives were present in the demonstrations at Sainte-Soline, and they formed a human chain around the wounded in the meadow, with their unmissable three-coloured scarves. Well, they were gassed all the same, with police clearly aiming at the wounded.
(Darmanin is now threatening to cut funding to the French branch of the International Federation of Human Rights Leagues.)
It’s only a temporary conclusion, as I really need to come up with a better, more detailed summary of whatever happened in Sainte-Soline, but I wanted to point something out before I finally go to sleep.
This is not about who’s got the worst police, or who’s got the most deserving cause. The current riots in France are not comparable to a movement like ‘Black Lives Matter’—the social uprising we’re facing has a different source and aim—and our respective politics are absolutely not interchangeable. This doesn’t mean that we do not stand in solidarity with one another as comrades, united against arbitrary state violence and the increasing attacks on our right to demonstrate and protest our governments.
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jhesite · 1 year ago
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"Soline, we don't have hands to hold anymore", Nantes
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the-bibrarian · 2 years ago
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Alright, so who’s writing the Sainte Soline post?
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What did they think would happen sending 3000 paramilitary officers?
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nando161mando · 8 months ago
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"The Battle of Sainte-Soline -- Last year on March 25, over 30,000 eco-activists and French police ensued in a day-long battle during a protest over water reservoir which left hundreds injured and one protester in a coma for a month."
Video and Report:
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aspho-dele · 2 years ago
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ottogatto · 2 years ago
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Sainte-Soline and the war of info around it is a fucking shitshow.
You just don't know how much.
And to think I still have the flyer to the place that was organized as a military trap organized by the State and the administration against civilians and unions... Even the SAMU (doctors that come in cars) was ordered not to come rescue the wounded demonstrators.
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kropotkindersurprise · 2 years ago
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March 25, 2023 - Scenes from the battle of Sainte-Soline, where 30.000 water protectors fought riot police at a mega bassin meant to privatize ground- and rainwater for corporate agriculture. [video]/[video]
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lejournaldupeintre · 11 months ago
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Sainte-Soline: the trial of the organizers of the banned demonstrations against the “basins”
Justice is bringing nine anti-basin activists to court in Niort in Deux-Sèvres. Environmental activists are suspected of having organized and participated in an unauthorized demonstration in March in Sainte-Soline. This mobilization gave rise to rare violence, leaving several dozen injured among demonstrators and law enforcement officers. Out of several thousand people present that day (6,000…
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dixvinsblog · 1 year ago
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Henri Baron - CONFETTI (Sainte-Soline)
Tu penses la vie comme un confettiun minuscule disque colorébleu jaune rose vertpastelvifou mortsirènes cyniqueschimères emphigouriquesà la merci de rêves gamésgamméset leurs gensd’arme à nainde jardinquadiséscervelles d’argileplombéescraqueléescœurs poussiéreuxétriquéspupilles dilatéeschakras renversés Et moi je dépensemon salaire en grèveà crier retraitecomme un général en déroutele cul sur un…
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atypeekmusic · 2 years ago
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[SOLIDAIRE] BIOLLANTE - Que le soleil est froid, que la col​è​re est no...
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hedgehog-moss · 2 years ago
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French news :
More protests organised in various French cities yesterday, this time to address the government's police repression against protesters, especially in Sainte Soline last week where in the span of a few hours 3,200 cops and military gendarmes threw 5,000 tear gas grenades and 89 sting ball grenades and shot 81 rubber bullets at protesters, resulting in 200 wounded (and 2 people in a coma). The Minister of the Interior told a lot of lies about what happened but there were MPs and journalists in attendance at this protest who told a different story.
They're singing "Down with the police state" (in Poitiers) and chanting "Police state, you won't keep us from protesting" in Paris.
The authorities are so suspicious of protesters in the current climate that the Prefect of the Grand Est region tweeted that while trying to quell an undeclared protest in Strasbourg yesterday the police found "rocks and pebbles hidden under hedges" in a park. So that's where we're at. After May 68 the Police Prefect in Paris asked for cobblestone streets in the Latin Quarter to be covered with asphalt so protesters could no longer throw rocks at cops which at least made sense, but this week a Prefect boasted about police taking action to remove subversive pebbles from the ground in a park.
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(this is a real tweet; the replies are gold)
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