Foreign Ministry returned to the EU with a question about the unrest in France

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Maria Zakharova, the official representative of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, reacted to the continuation of the protests in France. inside that telegraph channel He wondered how EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell would accept the detention of more than 70 people for their participation in the French uprisings on the night of 4 July.

What about Borrell? Are you not interested in the fate of democracy and human rights?” Written by Zakharova.

Protests in France began after the police killed a 17-year-old teenager in the suburbs of Paris on the evening of 27 June. One day later, residents of Lille and Toulouse joined the protests that started in Nantre. The protests then turned into riots and clashes with the police. On the night of 29 June, demonstrators set fire to cars, smashed shop windows, attacked police and set up barricades. By 1 July, rebels across France had set 1,350 vehicles on fire and attacked 234 buildings, including 47 police stations and 11 gendarmerie barracks at various levels. As a result of the riots, the police detained more than 1,000 people.

Formerly throughout France dead Clashes between protesters and police.

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