Paris Saint-Denis: teachers exercise their right of withdrawal after a fight with knifes and hammers between high school students

Several young people armed with “knives and a hammer” broke into the school on Wednesday at around 10 a.m., said Agnès Renaud, a teacher. A brawl broke out and a 16-year-old student was injured, added a source close to the investigation. He suffers from “superficial wounds” to his face, she said. Denouncing this “violent aggression”, some forty staff exercised their right to withdraw on Thursday and stopped working, demanding in particular “equal treatment of institutions”. Source BFMTV

Paris: There is a great shortage of police officers in Seine-Saint-Denis

Nearly 25% of the positions are vacant in the department, according to our information. In view of the shortage of candidates in Ile-de-France. The municipal police officer is a rare gem, if we are to believe the mayors of Seine-Saint-Denis and Ile-de-France. The alarm bell was sounded at the beginning of the summer about the difficulties in recruiting municipal police officers in the Paris region. After the 2015 attacks, local authorities’ demands increased sharply. And the shortage, with it. Source Le Parisien

 

The French Minister of National Education wants to restore “prestige” to the Arabic language

The Minister of National Education is thinking about developing Arabic, Chinese and Russian in school. The Minister of Education Jean-Michel Blanquer intends to develop a “qualitative strategy” vis-à-vis the learning of the Arabic language in school , he said Monday on BFMTV. A language “to which we must give prestige”, just as in Chinese and Russian, two other “great languages ​​of civilization”, he insisted. Source Le Parisien

As clashes rage in Libya’s Tripoli, Italy takes swipe at France

Italy has blamed French interference for the latest bout of violence in the Libyan capital, where deadly clashes between rival militias have cast further doubt on planned December elections brokered by Paris. In a barely disguised attack on French diplomacy on Monday, Italy’s firebrand deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini suggested French meddling was to blame for the renewed clashes in Tripoli – and for plunging Libya into chaos in the first place. Source France