E/CN.4/1996/72/Add.3
page 22
Once they have been written, these leaflets, which frequently end with
the instruction that they should be “reproduced and widely disseminated”, are
photocopied and redistributed according to the “chain letter” principle. This
makes it especially difficult to identify either the original authors or any
subsequent distributors.
Most of these publications circulate discreetly, if not clandestinely.
Their dissemination often reflects the vicissitudes of current events; they
come out quickly when major events occur that are widely covered in the media.
Developments since 1980
Radical racism, which was relatively moderate until 1982, later began to
increase steadily, along with a revival of xenophobia and the emergence of an
extreme right movement, whose views on immigration were favourably received in
certain quarters by people with financial problems who were sensitive about
the issues of insecurity and unemployment. Between 1981 and 1982, the number
of racist incidents almost doubled, from 23 to 43.
The rise continued, peaking in 1983 (68), 1985 (70) and 1988 (64).
the same time, the incidents became increasingly serious and deaths and
physical attacks occurred.
At
For example:
On 16 November 1983, on the train between Bordeaux and Ventimiglia,
three Foreign Legion recruits threw an Algerian out the window;
On 20 August 1984, in Haubourdin (59), a young North African was killed
by a supporter of the National Front;
On 11 November 1984, in Chateaubriant (44), a bar frequented by Turks
was machine-gunned (two persons killed, five injured). The perpetrator,
Frédéric Boulay, was jailed and escaped twice from Lannemezan (65); he was
caught in Spain and is reportedly being detained there;
In May and June 1986, in Toulon, Marseille and Nice, the “Commandos of
France against the Maghrebi invasion” claimed responsibility for seven bomb
attacks. The four persons responsible - one of whom was Claude Noblia, the
leader of the organization SOS France - were killed on 18 August 1986, when
their car blew up in Toulon because their own explosive device went off;
On 6 March, 5 June and 30 November 1987, in Petit-Quevilly (76) and
Caen (14), three attacks took place on North African bars (one person killed,
five injured) and “Irgoun Drei” claimed responsibility. The perpetrators,
Christophe Arcini and Michel Lajoye, were imprisoned. Lajoye, who is detained
in Ensisheim (68), is a very active letter-writer and corresponds with many
militant extremists;
On 19 December 1988, in Cagnes-sur-Mer (06), a bomb was thrown into the
Sonacotra hostel (1 dead, 12 injured). The “Massada” group claimed
responsibility. The perpetrators, who are members of the French and European