New Caledonia: a return of colonialism through the back door

By
Kanaks demonstrate in the New Caledonian capital Nouméa, on April 13th 2024. © Photo Nicolas Job / Sipa Kanaks demonstrate in the New Caledonian capital Nouméa, on April 13th 2024. © Photo Nicolas Job / Sipa

A sixth person was on Saturday reported to have been killed in the ongoing unrest in the French overseas territory of New Caledonia, amid increasing calls for Emmanuel Macron and his government to place on hold the legislation that sparked the violence. This will give newly arrived settlers, mostly European, on the South Pacific archipelago the right to vote in local elections, whereas until now the electoral register was frozen in order that the indigenous Kanak people maintain their political representation. In this analysis of the crisis, Mediapart publishing editor Carine Fouteau says that an almost four-decade-long process of decolonization is now at a crossroads, and at stake is the survival of the Kanak people who have been gradually turned into a minority under French domination since the mid-19th century.     

New Caledonia in 'deadly spiral' as Paris orders state of emergency

By Gilles Caprais
A scene in the New Caledonian capital Nouméa, May 15th. © Photo Delphine Mayeur / AFP A scene in the New Caledonian capital Nouméa, May 15th. © Photo Delphine Mayeur / AFP

The French government on Wednesday announced the establishment of a state of emergency in the Pacific Ocean territory of New Caledonia, where four people, including a gendarme, have died and many others were injured after two nights of rioting. The troubles were prompted by anger at new legislation to change the electoral register which will have the effect of diminishing the political representation of the archipelago’s indigenous Kanak people. “We’ve entered a deadly spiral," said France's high commissioner for the territory, Louis Le Franc. Gilles Caprais reports from the New Caledonian capital Nouméa, after the second night of violence.  

The battle over pornographic frescos inside French hospitals

Photomontage of scenes inside the junior doctors’ staff room at the Robert-Debré hospital in northern Paris. © Photomontage Armel Baudet / Mediapart avec documents Photomontage of scenes inside the junior doctors’ staff room at the Robert-Debré hospital in northern Paris. © Photomontage Armel Baudet / Mediapart avec documents

In a number public hospitals around France, the staff rooms of junior doctors – where they take meals and hold parties – are painted with sexist and pornographic frescos. While often these are scenes of orgies involving caricatures of consultants and junior doctors, at least one depicted the rape of a health minister. Last year the health authorities ordered hospitals to remove the frescos, but as Mediapart reports here, many have not done so because of opposition, not least from elder doctors, against a “cancel culture”. Meanwhile, feminist activists say the hospital murals are perpetuating a “an apologia of the culture of rape”. Prisca Borrel and Caroline Coq-Chodorge report.

Remembering childhood in France's 1960s immigrant shantytowns

By
A 1964 scene inside the notorious shantytown of the Paris suburb of Nanterre. © AFP A 1964 scene inside the notorious shantytown of the Paris suburb of Nanterre. © AFP

By the mid-1960s, around 75,000 immigrant workers and their families, who arrived in France as cheap labour during the post-war economic boom that began in the 1950s, lived in appalling conditions in shantytowns close to towns and cities, and notably Paris. The camps were only finally demolished in the mid-1970s, but their legacy lives on. French sociologist Margot Delon recently published a study in which she interviewed those who grew up in the shantytowns, and which offers an insight into the grim reality of a world from which thousands sought, and some succeeded, to escape. This review by Faïza Zerouala.

Head of France's equalities council faces claims over 'sexist' and 'racist' comments

By
HCE president Sylvie Pierre-Brossolette. © Photo Jean-Bernard Vernier / Abaca HCE president Sylvie Pierre-Brossolette. © Photo Jean-Bernard Vernier / Abaca

The organisation tasked with combating sexism in French society, the Haut Conseil à l’Égalité entre les Femmes et les Hommes (HCE), is itself in the middle of a crisis, according to internal documents and testimonies from staff and former staff obtained by Mediapart. Its president Sylvie Pierre-Brossolette, whose comments on a variety of topics have outraged employees at the HCE, said she had no intention of “explaining” herself to Mediapart. Sarah Brethes reports.

How work at three Paris Olympic sites was stopped over health and safety fears

By
 © Photo Eric Broncard / Hans Lucas via AFP © Photo Eric Broncard / Hans Lucas via AFP

In March and April health and safety inspectors stopped work at three high-profile Olympic sites because of safety concerns. The officials decided that parts of the sites, at Versailles, the Place de la Concorde in Paris and the Eiffel Tower, were too dangerous for workers. Work has since resumed and the organisers say the work interruptions have not affected their scheduled timetable for the Games which start in July. But as Dan Israel reports, health and safety officials are now keeping a close eye on the company involved, GL Events, whose boss was one of the first backers of Emmanuel Macron's bid to become president.

French MP quizzed over Hamas comments denounces emergence of state 'thought police'

By
Mathilde Panot at a campaign meeting in April 2024. © Photo Jeff Pachoud / AFP Mathilde Panot at a campaign meeting in April 2024. © Photo Jeff Pachoud / AFP

The president of the radical-left La France Insoumise group in the National Assembly, Mathilde Panot, has spoken out for the first time after she was questioned by detectives earlier this week over accusations of being an “apologist” for terrorism. The police summons and questioning related to a press statement that the MP issued on behalf of her party in the wake of the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7th. Warning about the emergence of a new “thought police” and the country's slide towards “authoritarianism”, Mathilde Panot has called on everyone, especially others on the Left, to grasp the full significance of this episode. Pauline Graulle spoke to her.

Macron dithers over French recognition of Palestinian state

 © Photo Stéphane Lemouton / Pool / Abaca © Photo Stéphane Lemouton / Pool / Abaca

Some in the French president's entourage are urging him to formally recognise Palestine as a state. As for Emmanuel Macron himself, he continues to consult and reflect on the issue, insisting that he is looking for the right moment for France to take this symbolic step. As Ilyes Ramdani and Rachida El Azzouzi report, his stance is similar to that adopted by President François Hollande ten years ago.

Mediapart launches battle against Google for transparency over intellectual property rights payments

By
 © Photo Sébastien Calvet / Mediapart © Photo Sébastien Calvet / Mediapart

As a result of confidentiality clauses imposed by Google, Mediapart will not accept the money owed to it over the use of its intellectual property in search engine results; what are known as “neighbouring rights”. It comes down to an issue of trust with our readership, explains Mediapart's publishing editor Carine Fouteau, who argues that a united front by the press publishing sector is more necessary than ever in the face of Big Tech's lack of transparency.

Local fears over plans for Europe's second biggest lithium mine in central France

By
The site of the planned lithium mine in central France. © Photo Richard Damoret / REA The site of the planned lithium mine in central France. © Photo Richard Damoret / REA

Paris-based minerals multinational Imerys wants to open a lithium mine near the village of Échassières in the centre of France where they have been holding consultations with local residents. If it goes ahead the mine would produce enough lithium for 663,000 electric car batteries each year. But as Nicolas Cheviron reports, people in the area are worried about the environmental impact of this major scheme as the debate continues over the best way to carry out energy transition.

The inside story of France's battle against Russian disinformation

By and
 © Photomontage Armel Baudet / Mediapart © Photomontage Armel Baudet / Mediapart

In recent days, a false video purporting to be from news channel BFMTV has stoked paranoia about the prevalence of bedbugs in France. This is just one more item of pro-Russian propaganda among countless other examples of fake news that have been circulating lately. Justine Brabant and Matthieu Suc investigate the hidden workings of France's daily fight against Moscow's online influence.

A French McCarthyism hounding expressions of solidarity with Palestine

By
A scene in Toulouse, south-west France, October 25th 2023. © Photo Patrick Batard / Hans Lucas via AFP A scene in Toulouse, south-west France, October 25th 2023. © Photo Patrick Batard / Hans Lucas via AFP

Showing solidarity with Palestine has been made into an offence in France, writes Mediapart co-founder Edwy Plenel. To express it in speech, in writing or by demonstrating is liable to lead to a police summons, a criminal sentence or, beforehand, a ban. Every democrat should be concerned about this situation.

European elections: what’s at stake with the vote in France

By
Campaign posters in the Paris suburb of Clamart, April 2024. © Photo Magali Cohen / Hans Lucas via AFP Campaign posters in the Paris suburb of Clamart, April 2024. © Photo Magali Cohen / Hans Lucas via AFP

European Union countries head for the polls in June to elect, country by country, their future members of the European Parliament. In France, the elections coincide with the mid-term point in Emmanuel Macron’s presidency and that of parliament, where no party has an absolute majority, and the poll in June represents the first nationwide test of political opinion since 2022. While they are of a so-called “second order”, they are also typically the stage for voters to cast aside strategic choices and display their true preferences. Fabien Escalona reports.

Paid 100,000 euros per day: what lies behind Stellantis CEO’s huge remuneration

By
Top earner: Carlos Tavares. © Photo Sameer Al-Doumy / AFP Top earner: Carlos Tavares. © Photo Sameer Al-Doumy / AFP

Carlos Tavares, the CEO of carmaking group Stellantis, has been awarded a total remuneration for 2023 amounting to 36.5 million euros. While the extraordinary sum has prompted a wave of indignation, like on every occasion that such massive payouts are made, the indecent amount above all reveals important truths about the organisation of our economic and social systems, writes Mediapart’s economic affairs correspondent Romaric Godin.

Gaza and Israel: the gagging frenzy of a Germany in denial

By
Marchers defying a ban on their pro-Palestinian demonstration held in Hamburg on October 23rd 2023. © Georg Wendt / DPA Marchers defying a ban on their pro-Palestinian demonstration held in Hamburg on October 23rd 2023. © Georg Wendt / DPA

Since the October 7th Hamas attacks and the subsequent Israeli offensive in Gaza, the German authorities and cultural institutions have embarked on a heavy-handed censorship against those who denounce the massive death toll of Palestinian civilians. Along with bans on demonstrations, there has been a wave of cancellations of cultural events involving artists, writers and thinkers who, because of their opposition to the war in Gaza, are accused of anti-Semitism, including Jewish critics of the Israeli government. As Mathieu Magnaudeix reports from Berlin, the gagging frenzy and staunch support for Israel across the German political class, regarded as a raison d’état, is rooted in the country’s shame of its Nazi past.