France moves to ban police chokeholds amid global George Floyd protests
French police will end the use of chokeholds amid international protests over the death of George Floyd.
In France, “[t]he method of seizing the neck via strangling will be abandoned and will no longer be taught in police schools,” Interior Minister Christopher Castaner said in a statement Monday, according to The Associated Press, adding “it will be now forbidden to push on the back of the neck or the neck.”
Floyd died May 25 after then-officer Derek Chauvin kept his knee on Floyd’s neck for more than eight minutes. Chauvin faces charges of second-degree murder as well as third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter, according to the wire service.
Paris police made an arrest that has drawn similar comparisons three days later, when an officer pinned a black man with his knee and shin on the man’s jaw, neck and upper chest, according to the AP.
Police use of chokeholds have been a flashpoint for the protests sweeping the country and the world after Floyd’s death.
French President Emmanuel Macron’s office said he spoke to top officials and told Castaner to fast-track previously promised police reforms.
French activists are similarly concerned that tensions in largely nonwhite neighborhoods between civilians and police have been exacerbated during the coronavirus lockdown period.
A march in the western French city of Nantes took place Monday, with demonstrators planning further protests Tuesday.
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