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Co-editors: Seán Mac Mathúna • John Heathcote
Consulting editor: Themistocles Hoetis
Field Correspondent: Allen Hougland

E-mail: editors@fantompowa.net

Papon and the killing of 200 Algerians in Paris during 1961
Seán Mac Mathúna

40 years ago the "Battle of Paris": When the Seine was full of bodies by Hakim Sadek of Liberté

Papon "ordered secret Paris massacre of 1961" by Charles Masters of The Sunday Times

The 1961 Massacre of Algerians in Paris: When the Media Failed the Test by James J. Napoli of the Washington Report

Bullets in the water by Hosni Abdel Rehim of the Al-Ahram Weekly

Photos: The Camp at Drancy, France

France shielded Vichy bureaucrats after war

The Nazi collaborator and Paris Police chief in 1961, Maurice Papon
"All states have their dark secrets, too painful to behold, ours in Ireland, the Swiss in their bank vaults, Frances - perhaps the most interesting case in post-war Europe - in uncovering what happened to at least 200 Algerian demonstrators in Paris, said to have been murdered by Police and secretly buried outside the city in 1961" Michael White, The Guardian, 5th January 2000

In October 1999, the former Vichy official Maurice Papon, went into hiding in Switzerland rather than face ten years in prison for helping in the wartime murder of over a thousand French Jews. He was soon found by the Swiss authorities (amid allegations that he had once been a spy for MI6) and sent back to France to serve his ten year sentence. In 1998, he was found guilty of crimes against humanity in connection with the wartime deportation of 1,690 Jews (including 223 children) to Nazi Germany in 1943. He was the Vichy official responsible for Jewish affairs in Bordeaux between 1942 and 1944.

There is one crime, however, which he has never been tried for: After the war, he escaped prosecution and between 1958 and 1967, he was the chief of police in Paris. In October 1961, at least 200 Algerian civilians, were killed in Paris by French Police. In the three months preceding the protest, over 30 Paris policemen were killed by the Algerian National Liberation Front (FLN), a group fighting to end French colonial rule in Algeria. In response, Papon ordered a violent crackdown on Paris' Algerian community, explaining to officers that they would be protected against any charges of excessive violence. Police searched the Algerian ghettos for FLN members, indiscriminately killing at least five innocent Algerians. This led directly to the huge march that was organised by the Algerian community to protest at France's Nazi-like treatment of it's citizens living in Paris.

The 200 deaths occurred after a peaceful march by some 30,000 Algerians was attacked by a 20,000 strong force of French police, and scores of bodies were later found in the River Seine, after it is believed, the French police killed them, and dumped their bodies in the river.

According to Reporters Sans Frontières, on 19 October 1998, French police seized the 17 October edition of the Algerian daily Liberté at Lyon airport. No official reason was given for the move. However, Reporters Sans Frontières believed it to be connected with an article by Hakim Sadek entitled "When the Seine was full of bodies". Liberté was publishing this article to mark the 35th anniversary of a demonstration by Algerians in Paris that led to an estimated 200 Algerians being killed by police. Read that article here in Flame: When the Seine was full of bodies by Hakim Sadek

These were not the last controversial deaths caused by police under Papon's responsibility. Four months later, in February 1962, Papon went too far even for the French President Charles De Gaulle, when French police killed five white French citizens at a Communist-led demonstration against the war in Algeria. 700,000 people marched at the funeral of the five protesters while a general strike shut down Paris. However, while the five killed in February 1962 became prominent martyrs for the Left, little was done to raise the issue of the 200 Algerians murdered by Papon's men in October 1961.

In her memoirs, one of the leading French opponents of the 1954-62 Algerian War, the feminist philosopher Simone de Beauvoir, singled out Papon's role as Paris police chief in October 1961. She compared France's treatment of the Algerian's in 1961 to the fate of the Jews of Drancy during the Nazi occupation, who like the Nazis and their Vichy collaborators herded the Jews into the Vel' d'Hiv' stadium before deporting them to the death - ironically also the place of detention for 10,000 Algerians arrested by Papon's men in 1961:

"The police waited for the Algerians to come up out of the metro stations, made them stand still with their hands above their heads, then hit them with truncheons.... Corpses were found hanging in the Bois de Boulogne, and others, disfigured and mutilated, in the Seine... Ten thousand Algerians had been herded into the Vel' d'Hiv' [stadium], like the Jews in Drancy once before. Again I loathed it all -- this country, myself, the whole world" (Force of Circumstance, p. 599).

Although the French authorities have shown no hesitation in prosecuting other Nazi war criminals - such as Klaus Barbie (jailed for life in 1987) and Paul Touvier (also given a life sentence in 1994) - it seems reluctant to investigate events that happened in Paris during 1961. In fact, there has more secrecy over the background to these allegations compared to Papon's role in the Nazi's so-called "final solution" against France's Jews during the war. When Papon escaped to Switzerland it was reported in the media (The Guardian, October 22nd 1999) that the Algerian government would also like to put him on trial for "repressive measures" used when he was a French governor in the war of independence and for:

"The Killing of scores of Algerians in Paris when he was De Gaulle's police chief"

It was during the Nazi occupation of France, that following a partisan attack on German soldiers, SS troops would massacre French civilians in reprisal (one such event happened in the village of Oradour sur Glane in 1944). Thus, the same happened in Paris when the police where under the control of the wartime quisling Maurice Papon. Before the massacre, 14 French police had been killed by Algerian guerilla movement, the FLN (which rose to become the first government in Algeria after the French were driven out in 1962). Over a million Algerians would die in the struggle to liberate their country from French colonial rule. French atrocities are well documented in Algeria, but few have suspected that a crime had been carried out in Paris comparable with the Nazi atrocities during the second world war.

Three months before the protest in Paris in 1961, Papon had publicly said that the French police would respond with "10 blows to every Algerian blow" (2). Are the 200 dead Algerians dead as a result of this policy ? As with some senior other Nazi collaborators In France, Papon was not put on trial at the end of the war. The official statistic of two dead in clashes in police have long been contested by historians. Papon himself said that "only" 15 or 20 protesters had been thrown into the River Seine by Police. The real figure is not known. However, recently, a police participant in the massacre contradicted this in 1998. Raoul Letard, who as a young policeman took part in the killings told L'Express magazine:

"We went to the upper floor of buildings and we fired on anything that moved . . . It was horrible, horrible. The man hunt went on for two hours - it was terrible, terrible, terrible. We finally went home because there was nothing left to fight" (2).

The violence against the demonstrators took place in several incidents. The French police opened fire on the streets killing Algerians, after which they are alleged to have dumped the bodies in the River Seine. Out of 10,000 Algerians that were arrested, some demonstrators were not heard of again, and it is presumed that these detainees were taken to a stadium and to police headquarters next to the Seine River, from which dozens of bodies were later recovered. One police chief said his men had responded with "understandable aggression", feeling they were finally able to confront the FLN. They "took good advantage" of the opportunity to "liquidate their dispute," with the Algerian population of Paris.

Papon had publicly declared three months before the massacre that the French police would respond with "10 blows to every Algerian blow". Following the massacre he is alleged to have assured the Paris police that he would cover up any human rights abuses: one police participant in the killings, Raoul Letard, said:

"It was horrible, but Papon said he would cover for us" (1).

On the night of October 17th 1961, Mr Letard said that he heard on the police radio that some of his racist colleagues had been surrounded by "little rats" as they referred to the Algerians. When they rushed to the site, they said they found hundreds of Algerians protesting against a curfew imposed on their community in Paris. Letard added:

"There was no reason to hold back". Later, there were so many bodies on the streets afterwards that police officers and there commanders argued over whether to leave them on the spot or to try and get rid of them. Most historians now agree that the police simply threw them into the River Seine".

Only Papon had refused to accept this: in 1998 he astounded a French court by inferring that it was the FLN that had caused the deaths. (2)

Papon's actions in 1961 are covered by a general amnesty and the whole incident have never been the subject of an official inquiry. Although he became a French cabinet minister in 1978, he was forced to resign in 1981 over revelations of his wartime collaboration with the Nazi's.

However, newly opened secret records prove that the French government and Police lied about the extent of the massacre of the Algerians.(1) Police registers showing at least 90 dead came to light after the French government gave researchers permission to look into archives that would normally have been kept secret for 25 years. These records were initially harder to get hold of than those concerning the Vichy period. One researcher David Assouline said that the count of dead made in the 1961 police reports had not yet been completed. He said of the records:

"The pages for October and November (1961) are full of names of Algerian-French Muslims followed by a rubber stamp saying 'mort' (dead) . . . against some names there was an indication that bodies had been recovered from the River Seine".(3)

This has also been corroborated by some French police at the demonstration. They later stated that Algerian demonstrators had been thrown into the River Seine. There appears to be an inconsistency with Vichy collaborators being tried for war crimes - whereas there are no prosecutions for those involved in the Paris massacre of 1961 ? Confirmation of the sensitivity of this subject was revealed in October 1998 when French police seized the edition of the Algerian newspaper Liberté that contained an article about the massacre to prevent distribution in France. The incident confirms a long disturbing history of brutal racism that prevails amongst senior levels of the French police and the establishment, notably against France's North African population.

According to a report posted on the website of a South African Daily Mail & Guardian newspaper (February 11th 1999), a mass grave which could contain the remains of Algerians massacred by French police during the independence war has been discovered by two journalists in a Paris suburb. The remains were found in a former rubbish tip and may be those of Algerians who took part in a demonstration in Paris on October 17 1961. The newspaper reported how "the protest was violently put down by the police and many bodies were later recovered from the Seine River while hundreds of people disappeared". It reported the official death toll of the demonstration as seven people but this was updated to 32 people in 1998. The grave was uncovered after a retired police officer told journalists that he had taken part in an operation to dump bodies on the day after the demonstration.

The weekly published its story about the grave on the day of the resumption of a libel action brought against French historian Jean-Luc Einaudi by the prefect of police at the time, Maurice Papon. In an article in the daily newspaper Le Monde, Einaudi accused Papon of ordering the killings. At the libel case, Papon admitted that repression of the protest was "tough" and that 11 700 out of 20 000 people were rounded up.

Clearly the French authorities are still sensitive about this whole matter and it remains to be whether any steps will be taken by Paris to remember permanently the 200 victims of Police repression in October 1961. Either way, the Nazi-collaborator Maurice Papon was never prosecuted for these crimes, and it is shameful that De Gaulle, who led the French resistance against the Nazi occupation should have allowed the political rehabilitation of this war criminal after the war when he should have been put on trial for his participation in the Holocaust.

References

1 New York Times, October 17th 1998
2 Irish Times, October 17th 1998 and Reuters, Paris, France, October 17th 1998
3 The Observer, 24th August 1997.
 

© 1998

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