Five held over death of Clement Meric after fight with skinheads in Paris, France
AFP JUNE 08, 2013 12:24PM
Students react to an attack that left a young man brain dead as they gather in front of the Institut d'etudes Politiques, also known as Sciences Po, in Paris. Picture: Jacques Brinon Source: AP
FRENCH authorities have detained five people in connection with the death of a leftist student activist following a skinhead attack that sent shock waves across the country.
The five suspects, aged between 19 and 32 and including one woman, were due to appear before a judge on Saturday.
Earlier on Friday, French Interior Minister Manuel Valls vowed to crack down on far-right groups after 18-year-old Clement Meric, a student at the country's prestigious Sciences-Po university, died following a fight with skinheads in Paris.
His death on Thursday, the day after the incident, brought condemnation across the political spectrum and prompted thousands of people out onto the streets in Paris and other major cities in protest.
As well as the five suspects held, three more were picked up and later released on Friday.
According to a police source, several of the suspects are known to have links to far-right groups.
The fatal fight occurred on Wednesday near the city's central Saint-Lazare railway station.
Flowers left at the site where left-wing activist Clement Meric was allegedly attacked by skinheads in Paris. Picture: Antoine Antoniol
Meric, a model student, was left brain dead.
The man suspected of having dealt the fatal blow said he did not intend to kill, a police source said.
The alleged attacker, who is in his 20s, is a known skinhead.
The tough-talking Socialist Valls pledged a ''merciless'' crackdown on far-right groups, while admitting it could not be accomplished overnight.
When asked if such groups would be dissolved, he said on RMC radio: ''We will do it without doubt, but it will take a little time, lots of determination.
''Sadly such movements are resurging,'' he said, citing groups of ''racists, anti-Semites and homophobes''.
On Thursday evening, more than 15,000 people took part in marches in honour of Meric in Paris and other cities around the country, including his hometown of Brest.
Political tensions are high in France after months of protests against legalising gay marriage that sometimes ended with troublemakers from the extreme right clashing with police.