Advertisement

Tens of thousands take to the streets across France in support of Gaza ceasefire

© ALAIN JOCARD / AFP

Calling for peace and an "immediate ceasefire" in the conflict between Israel and Hamas, protest rallies in support of the Palestinian people took place on Saturday in Paris and elsewhere across France.

Thousands gathered at Paris' Place de la République at 15h00 to protest through the streets towards Place de la Nation on Saturday afternoon – the first unbanned rally in support of the Palestinian people that is allowed to march.

An authorised "static rally" took place on Thursday evening in Paris with 2,000 people taking part.

The demonstration, called by associations, trade unions and political parties, was not banned by the prefecture of police, who had warned in advance that it would not tolerate "any excesses".

Organisers say 60,000 turned up for the street protest in Paris. Police have put the figure at 19,000.

The leader of the France Unbowed party, Jean-Luc Mélenchon – who has been criticised since the start of the conflict for failing to denounce Hamas as a terrorist organisation – called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza at the Paris demonstration, where he said "an appalling massacre" was taking place as a result of Israeli bombardments.

Many placards read "Free Palestine" and "Cease fire, stop bombing civilians," but alongside the majority of slogans in support of Gaza, others were aimed at Israel, such as "Israel is a murderer, Macron is an accomplice".

Other demonstrations and rallies took place across France, including in Bordeaux, Orléans, Rouen and Nice.


Read more on RFI English

Read also:
Lebanon working to avoid entering Hamas-Israel war as clashes along its border escalate
French Jewish groups set up hotline for people traumatised by Israel-Hamas war
Current aid system for Gaza 'geared to fail,' UN warns