Three men accused of ‘psychological violence’ at Eiffel Tower
The three men were questioned by an investigative judge
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Your support makes all the difference.Three men are under investigation in France on suspicion of committing “psychological violence," prosecutors said on Monday.
The three allegedly placed five coffins at the foot of the Eiffel Tower, a Paris landmark that will feature prominently in the upcoming Olympic Games in the summer.
According to officials at the Paris prosecutor’s office, the three men — citizens of Bulgaria, Germany and Ukraine — placed the coffins, covered with a French flag that included an inscription of “French soldiers of Ukraine," near the Eiffel Tower on Saturday,
On Monday, the three men were questioned by an investigative judge. The prosecutor’s office is demanding that they be are charged with “premeditated violence”. The offence would carry a three-year sentence and a 45,000 euro fine, the officials told The Associated Press.
Placing coffins at the foot of the Paris landmark that millions of tourists visit every year, “is considered an act of psychological violence," they said. It caused employees of the landmark and others "an inability to work,” the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of a pending investigation.
The motive for the incident was unclear.
The Olympic rings will be displayed on the Eiffel Tower. The Olympic and Paralympic medals in Paris are being embedded with pieces from a hexagonal chunk of iron taken from the 29-meter (95-foot-) -long and 15-meter (49-foot) -high monument.
On Friday, French authorities raised preliminary terrorism charges against an 18-year-old accused of plotting to target spectators at the soccer games at the Paris Olympics. It was the first such thwarted plot targeting the Games, which start in eight weeks.
Those arrested in the Eiffel Tower incident include the driver of the vehicle that transported the coffins, a 39-year-old Bulgarian, as well as two people associated with him — a 25-year-old German man and a 16-year-old Ukrainian, who was arrested aboard a Paris-Berlin bound Flixbus, the officials said.
Last month The Independent revealed that on one of the busiest travel days of the year, planes will be excluded from a vast area of northern France for over five hours during the opening ceremony of the Paris 2024 Olympics. The ban has been imposed due to fears of a terrorist attack.
A no-fly zone covering 28,922 square miles – almost the size of Belgium – has been ordered by the French civil aviation authority, the DGAC, on the afternoon and evening of Friday 26 July. That is a key date for millions of travellers from France, the UK and elsewhere.