PARIS — Amine Kessaci has been targeted with death threats and lost two brothers to drug gang violence.
But that has not silenced the 22-year-old activist who's running on an anti-drug platform in next month's municipal elections in Marseille, the French port city long known as a hub for the drug trade.
''At 17, I buried my older brother, Brahim, who was found burned. Less than three months ago, I buried my younger brother, Mehdi, who had done nothing, who died just because he was my little brother,'' Kessaci told The Associated Press.
''In the mourning I'm going through, the message I want to convey is that I will not be silent,'' the son of Algerian immigrants said.
In November, thousands marched in Marseille, France's second-most populous city, to denounce drug trafficking following the killing of 20-year-old Mehdi Kessaci in a shooting authorities suspect was a hit by drug gangs to intimidate and punish his activist brother.
Kessaci, his brothers and three other siblings grew up in Frais Vallon, a sprawling housing project built in the 1960s to house Marseille's waves of North African immigrants. Some 6,000 people, many living in poverty, inhabit its 14 concrete apartment towers, which are controlled by drug gangs and are among the most crime-ridden neighborhoods in France.
Kessaci's 22-year-old brother, Brahim, was dealing drugs in Frais Vallon when he was killed in 2020, his body discovered in a burned-out car.
That year, when he was just 17, Amine Kessaci founded the non-profit group Conscience to support families affected by drug violence, which the group says on its website too often condemns young people in housing projects ''to failure, prison or the grave.''