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World / Europe

French policeman to face trial over protester's lost eye

Published: 25 Oct 2024 - 07:50 pm | Last Updated: 25 Oct 2024 - 07:52 pm
File photo used for demonstration purposes

File photo used for demonstration purposes

AFP

Paris: A French policeman must stand trial in Paris charged with destroying a protester's eye with a tear gas grenade, a judge has ruled, as riot weapons stand under close scrutiny.

The case stems from the partial blinding of Manuel Coisne, who was struck in the eye by the projectile during a January 2019 "Yellow Vests" protest in Paris.

Identified only as Fabrice T., the officer faces charges of deliberate violence causing a permanent disability by a public official.

He is accused of failing to respect regulations calling for gas grenades to be launched at an angle of at least 30 degrees, rather than fired directly into crowds.

The policeman's shot "forcefully struck the left eye of Manuel Coisne... causing the irreversible loss" of the organ, the judge said in a court document dated Thursday but seen Friday by AFP.

"Criminal proceedings against this policeman who destroyed Manu Coisne's eye... are a relief," Coisne's lawyer Arie Alimi told AFP.

Fabrice T.'s lawyer did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

During the 2018-19 Yellow Vest protests, hundreds of thousands of people swarmed through French cities in a show of rage against President Emmanuel Macron's policies, rising fuel prices and a cost-of-living crisis.

In total, 23 protesters lost an eye during those demonstrations, according to an AFP tally, allegedly when police fired rubber and other projectiles.

But no police officer has so far been convicted. One was cleared in court, while other cases were dropped.

Coisne took part in a demonstration on Paris' Place d'Italie square on November 16, 2019 that descended into violence.

Surveillance video shows Coisne, then aged 41, speaking with other demonstrators away from the clashes when he is suddenly hit on the left side of his face by a tear gas grenade.

The judge's decision for the trial to go ahead went against prosecutors' recommendation to drop the case.

His actions were "in line with the training the accused received" they wrote -- despite the police, a ballistics expert and the weapon's manufacturer all considering it a proscribed direct shot.

Prosecutors last month requested a trial for another officer accused of firing the rubber bullet that destroyed the eye of a prominent "Yellow Vest" protester.

The weapons have been involved in further contested incidents since then.

A number of people were blinded or suffered other serious injuries in summer 2023 riots following the police shooting of a teen during a Paris traffic stop.