NANTERRE, France — One year after a French teenager with North African origins was killed by police — a shooting that sparked shock and days of rioting across France — his mother led a silent march Saturday to pay homage to her son.
It comes at a politically fraught time. Hate speech is blighting the campaign for snap parliamentary elections taking place this weekend, and an anti-immigration party that wants to boost police powers to use their weapons, and has historic ties to racism and antisemitism is leading in the polls.
Several hundred family members, friends and supporters gathered in the Paris suburb of Nanterre to remember 17-year-old Nahel Merzouk, who was shot dead at point-blank range by a police officer at a traffic check on June 27, 2023.
Within hours of his death, Merzouk, a delivery driver from a working-class neighborhood, became a symbol. For many across France, he was the embodiment of young French Black and North African men who, studies show, face police checks and discrimination more frequently than their white counterparts.
‘'My son was executed,'' his mother Mounia told the crowd. ''When I go back home, no one is there. I don't have my baby anymore. When I go to his room, it's empty.'' She expressed fear that she might run into the police officer who killed her son and has been released pending further investigation.
Friends wore white T-shirts with Merzouk's photo, and fellow residents of his housing project held a banner reading ''Justice for Nahel.'' The march ended at the spot where he was killed, and an imam sang and read a prayer.
There was no visible police presence, though organizers of the march recruited guards to ensure security for the event. Merzouk's mother asked politicians to stay away, to avoid politicking or tensions the day before France's parliamentary elections
On Sunday, French voters will cast ballots in the first round of snap elections for the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament, that could lead to the country's first far-right government since the World War II Nazi occupation.