France marks one year since murder of teacher Samuel Paty by IS sympathiser

France marks one year since murder of teacher Samuel Paty by IS sympathiser
The commemoration of the teacher's brutal execution by a young Islamic State sympathiser takes place as right-wing grows in France ahead of the 2022 presidential elections.
2 min read
15 October, 2021
A minute's silence was held across France in tribute to late history teacher Samuel Paty [Getty]

Nationwide commemorations were in France on Friday, a day before the first anniversary of the murder of schoolteacher .

Commemorative events and a minute of silence were carried out in at all primary and secondary schools across the country, and imams and dignitaries of the Great Mosque of Paris prayed on Fridaymorning in front of the school where Paty used to teach in Conflans-Sainte-Honorine, in the suburbs of Paris.

Paty was stabbed to death and beheaded on 16 October2020, near the school where he worked as a history teacher. His murderer, a young Chechen refugee andIslamic State group sympathiser,targeted Paty following false accusations posted onsocial media, which claimed the teacher had forcibly shown caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed to his students.

Further ceremoniesare due to take place tomorrow on the anniversary of the murder. President Emmanuel Macron will host the Paty family at his presidential palace, while the city of Paris announced it will inaugurate a public square in his name.

One year on, fifteen people are under investigation for involvementin the killing. Among them are seven children, five of whom were at the school.

Perspectives

The attack sparkednationwide controversy on theinability of the state to stop and acts of terrorism.

Paty’s death was followed by a rise in anti-refugee and anti-Islam rhetoric, both of which have continued to growas the country approaches its next presidential election.

In December 2020, the government dissolved theCollective Against Islamophobia in France, a civil society organization that recorded and foughtagainst acts of Islamophobia, for what it called “Islamist propaganda.”

In July,France adopted an thatactivists widely denounced as targeting the country's Muslim minority.