The Prague Post - Teens lured to Marseille become 'slaves' of its drugs war

EUR -
AED 4.282284
AFN 77.769297
ALL 96.678852
AMD 449.126943
ANG 2.087189
AOA 1069.258373
ARS 1697.118652
AUD 1.798056
AWG 2.101786
AZN 1.986896
BAM 1.956789
BBD 2.35569
BDT 142.451981
BGN 1.957152
BHD 0.440923
BIF 3447.241886
BMD 1.166039
BND 1.514265
BOB 8.082084
BRL 6.30268
BSD 1.169591
BTN 102.94902
BWP 15.67292
BYN 3.984313
BYR 22854.368279
BZD 2.352289
CAD 1.635196
CDF 2571.116853
CHF 0.928751
CLF 0.028569
CLP 1120.736306
CNY 8.31042
CNH 8.310845
COP 4497.072364
CRC 587.096659
CUC 1.166039
CUP 30.900039
CVE 110.320745
CZK 24.302244
DJF 208.275241
DKK 7.472917
DOP 73.967376
DZD 150.926263
EGP 55.400994
ERN 17.490588
ETB 173.836239
FJD 2.651399
FKP 0.868851
GBP 0.871903
GEL 3.152808
GGP 0.868851
GHS 12.543338
GIP 0.868851
GMD 83.955237
GNF 10149.12834
GTQ 8.958527
GYD 244.653623
HKD 9.056935
HNL 30.717522
HRK 7.540547
HTG 153.387506
HUF 389.579573
IDR 19324.359513
ILS 3.854348
IMP 0.868851
INR 102.641359
IQD 1532.174205
IRR 49046.528212
ISK 141.919081
JEP 0.868851
JMD 187.964978
JOD 0.826768
JPY 175.611379
KES 151.056329
KGS 101.970576
KHR 4707.378632
KMF 492.655985
KPW 1049.453263
KRW 1657.805016
KWD 0.35661
KYD 0.974693
KZT 629.187928
LAK 25379.824389
LBP 104735.722809
LKR 354.108931
LRD 214.028148
LSL 20.395206
LTL 3.443011
LVL 0.705326
LYD 6.348208
MAD 10.695304
MDL 19.724967
MGA 5202.628881
MKD 61.651152
MMK 2448.043252
MNT 4196.908958
MOP 9.356728
MRU 46.773635
MUR 52.507186
MVR 17.844759
MWK 2028.024758
MXN 21.427895
MYR 4.927727
MZN 74.522005
NAD 20.395206
NGN 1715.290741
NIO 43.041749
NOK 11.733882
NPR 164.718232
NZD 2.03675
OMR 0.447706
PAB 1.169591
PEN 3.960201
PGK 4.988521
PHP 67.771409
PKR 331.096002
PLN 4.245491
PYG 8301.194582
QAR 4.263154
RON 5.089999
RSD 117.229236
RUB 94.947977
RWF 1697.657824
SAR 4.372741
SBD 9.605099
SCR 16.228978
SDG 701.376864
SEK 11.000589
SGD 1.510259
SHP 0.874831
SLE 26.959259
SLL 24451.258412
SOS 668.437761
SRD 45.960645
STD 24134.657173
STN 24.512386
SVC 10.234171
SYP 15160.617712
SZL 20.388302
THB 38.181998
TJS 10.789352
TMT 4.081137
TND 3.415026
TOP 2.730985
TRY 48.901556
TTD 7.933009
TWD 35.723831
TZS 2877.153822
UAH 48.813866
UGX 4088.065694
USD 1.166039
UYU 46.82366
UZS 14223.186956
VES 234.627668
VND 30715.804552
VUV 143.407079
WST 3.275381
XAF 656.288622
XAG 0.022425
XAU 0.000275
XCD 3.15128
XCG 2.107865
XDR 0.816212
XOF 656.288622
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.570949
ZAR 20.25311
ZMK 10495.756208
ZMW 26.520401
ZWL 375.464146
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    79.09

    0%

  • BCC

    0.1900

    71.03

    +0.27%

  • SCS

    -0.0100

    16.55

    -0.06%

  • GSK

    0.1400

    43.91

    +0.32%

  • AZN

    0.8600

    84.69

    +1.02%

  • CMSD

    0.2000

    24.29

    +0.82%

  • RIO

    -0.7300

    68.02

    -1.07%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    45.23

    +0.02%

  • BTI

    0.4800

    51.62

    +0.93%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.77

    -0.07%

  • NGG

    1.0500

    76.95

    +1.36%

  • CMSC

    0.3801

    24.1

    +1.58%

  • BCE

    0.5700

    24.26

    +2.35%

  • VOD

    0.1900

    11.67

    +1.63%

  • BP

    0.3500

    33.13

    +1.06%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3900

    14.91

    -2.62%

Teens lured to Marseille become 'slaves' of its drugs war
Teens lured to Marseille become 'slaves' of its drugs war / Photo: Christophe SIMON - AFP/File

Teens lured to Marseille become 'slaves' of its drugs war

Marseille's drug lords have a problem. Last year 32 of their foot soldiers were shot dead in the crime-plagued French Mediterranean port city.

Text size:

Thirteen more have died in gang shootings so far this year, with three killed and eight wounded in one night alone this week. With so much bloodshed, dealers cannot find enough locals willing to risk their lives selling drugs on the streets.

So they are luring often vulnerable teenagers from the rest of France, who are easily sacrificed, to fill the gap.

Many of the young recruits "find themselves reduced to a state of semi-slavery, held hostage and even tortured," the city's chief judge, Olivier Leurent, told AFP.

The mounting death toll in Marseille echoes similar explosions of extreme violence in Antwerp and Rotterdam, the ports through which most of Europe's cocaine is smuggled by gangs linked to the Mexican cartels.

By "outsourcing" street dealing to young, expendable outsiders known as "jobbeurs", Marseille's drug lords make sure "they won't know enough about the network to pass on information" if they are arrested, said Tiphanie Binctin, of the French police's anti-drug unit OFAST.

It all starts with ads on social media like Snapchat. "We need a lookout. Young, with a good memory for faces, respectful of customers. Helpful to be good on motorbikes. 10 am to 10 pm."

Having failed his exams, Zacharie* couldn't resist the lure of "easy money" and travelled south from the Paris region to be a lookout at one of Marseille's 130 known drug-dealing spots. "They pay most here," he told a judge.

- Tale of two cities -

Like him, most of the young "jobbeurs" arrive at Marseille's Saint Charles train station, with its staggering views towards the blue of the Mediterranean.

But they do not get a chance to take in the old town, or the wealthy seaside suburbs that lead to the spectacular azur coves of the Calanques. Instead, they are taken directly to the notorious north of the city, to some of Europe's poorest and most crime-infested estates.

Their names may be redolent of bucolic old Provence -- La Marine Bleue, Les Oliviers (the Olive Trees) -- but gangs have such a hold here they even have checkpoints filtering traffic in and out of the estates.

Marseille's judges say four out of 10 minors they now see in drug cases come from outside the city.

And it is teenagers -- some as young as 14 -- who are on the front line of the city's vicious drugs war.

A 17-year-old was beaten and stabbed to death on the Paternelle estate in February by a mob of 30, the gruesome murder filmed by the killers before being posted on social media.

This week a 16-year-old was gunned down there, and a 14-year-old badly wounded by fire from an assault rifle.

- 'The French Connection' -

The stakes are high. Some of the city's dealing spots turn over 80,000 euros a day, with police scattering 12 customers queuing up to buy drugs during one recent swoop.

The roots of the drugs trade in France's second city are long and deep, and the gangs that control it are highly sophisticated.

Marseille's Corsican drugs mafia controlled most of the heroin that was smuggled into the United States from the 1930s to the 1970s, when "The French Connection" -- which gave its name to the Hollywood film -- was finally dismantled.

But the criminal underworld, which has since switched to cocaine and cannabis, continues to have a strong hold in France's poorest city.

Despite the spiralling risks, there seems to be no shortage of young recruits willing to work for the gangs.

"It's better than being a street walker," Cindy*, 21, told police after she was arrested.

"I had to work to get my daughter back."

The dealers put her up in a hotel when she arrived in Marseille from her village in the Herault.

Others have not been so lucky, according to the police, forced to sleep on balconies, in basements or next to bins.

"It's pure exploitation," said children's judge Laurence Bellon, with teens having to work long hours and take huge risks.

Even so, some youths making "1,400 euros a week for working seven days in a row... think they have made it and are earning a fortune," said Marseille's prosecutor Dominique Laurens.

- Torture -

But the reality is very different.

The young outsiders are more vulnerable and "less well paid and well treated than locals", said lawyer Valentin Loret, who has represented some of them. And when police catch them with drugs and cash they fall in the debt trap, with "the gangs demanding they pay them back".

Migrants from Algeria and Nigeria have also been recruited, thinking they were being hired to work on building sites, he added.

Marseille "is no Eldorado", said Frederique Camilleri, the region's top law enforcement official. "It's violence, fake debts, torture and acts of barbarity. It is being at the mercy of the gangs."

Their control is total, with teenagers punished for not counting the cash quickly enough or for failing to raise the alert fast enough when the police appear.

A 16-year-old who had run away to Marseille from a children's home in Chartres in central France was found unconscious after being tortured with a burning torch for selling a small amount of pot without permission.

One of his torturers, also then underage, was jailed for 10 years in November.

Another minor was recently put on a train back to his home by the authorities only to be intercepted at the next station by dealers because he had a "debt" to repay.

Many of the cases verge on human trafficking, said Judge Bellon.

One group of teenagers recruited online were locked up, beaten and tortured for no apparent reason after their arrival in the city during the pandemic in 2020.

One of the boys, who was 15 at the time, was raped by a young dealer and blackmailed with a sex tape to keep him quiet -- a tactic the gangs often use, according to a judicial source.

- 'Paupers in designer labels' -

Yet some vulnerable young people are still willing to put their lives at risk for a few hundred euros.

With many having dropped out of school at 11, said Judge Bellon, they cling onto the "designer clothes (they buy from dealing) as only part of their identity they can put forward.

"They are paupers in designer labels," said one of their lawyers, shocked by a client oblivious to the risks he was taking as he strutted around in a coat worth several hundred euros.

The conspicuous consumption of social media influencers and series like "Narcos" that glamorise the drug world seem to justify their lives, the authorities argue.

While police struggle to reach out to the teens, or work their way up the chain of command, some end up running to them when things get desperate.

In December, a young man who feared he was about to be kidnapped jumped onto a bus and begged passengers to help him. A month later another climbed onto the roof of a tower block and pleaded with the emergency services to rescue him, a police source said.

- 'Mexicanisation' -

Prosecutor Laurens said she feared "a worsening of the situation, with a shift to what some South American countries are experiencing -- a Mexicanisation" -- even if the number of deaths is not comparable.

Judge Bellon is equally worried. "It is more than lawlessness," she told AFP.

"It sometimes reminds me of an image we have of Brazil, where there is a complete divide between wealthy neighbourhoods and those where there is extreme poverty and hyper violence."

Despite the spiralling violence, some young "jobbeurs" like Zacharie -- arrested only three days after he arrived in Marseille -- have managed to free themselves from the clutches of the gangs.

He was spared jail, thanks to the intervention of his mother, but was banned from the city for his own good for three years.

As the prosecutor wryly put it, "the local climate didn't suit him".

* The names of the young people have been changed to protect them from reprisals.

L.Hajek--TPP