A Calvary in the 8th Arrondissement

The following two videos feature testimony by a young French woman named Claire, who was raped in the entryway of her apartment building in Paris by an African culture-enricher.

The first video is an excerpt from a TV panel discussion in which Claire participated. The second is a one-on-one interview with Claire by the popular French commentator and former presidential candidate Éric Zemmour.

Many thanks to HeHa for the translations, and to Vlad Tepes and RAIR Foundation for the subtitling.

Video #1:

Video #2:

Video transcript #1:

00:00   You experienced a Calvary, a rape on November 11th in the hall of your building,
00:04   while you were returning home. Can you just tell us what happened?
00:09   Yes, of course. So, what I had done was go shopping because
00:12   I was supposed to have dinner with my boyfriend, in the evening.
00:15   I went to the Monoprix store, ten minutes away, walking from home.
00:19   I went back home quietly, I didn’t have my headphones on, I was just on the phone.
00:23   I was typing my password for my street door, and it’s a big, Parisian port-cochère,
00:28   so the door took a long time to close. I walked five meters,
00:31   then I heard loud footsteps behind me. I found myself tackled to the ground,
00:37   and suddenly I started to feel hands on my neck, which were strangling me.
00:41   I couldn’t breathe, I screamed in hope that some neighbors would arrive.
00:46   Eventually, I understood that the person wanted more than just to steal my things:
00:52   he wanted to rape me.
00:55   So I started to fight back, it lasted about ten minutes, except that I had, I think,
01:01   the choice between death and rape.
01:04   So to save some time I chose to do what he wanted. And all that lasted about thirty minutes,
01:10   and fortunately a neighbor arrived.
01:14   However, the neighbor didn’t come to my rescue, so this Calvary continued,
01:21   and after that, I locked myself in my house; I called the police.
01:27   Thirty minutes of Calvary, since the attacker got on you.
01:32   During those thirty minutes, were you able to scream?
01:37   Could you scream or were you silent out of fear? How did it happen?
01:42   You scream, you fight back, except that you also get exhausted.
01:46   And after you screamed, no one answered? —Unfortunately no, no one was there.
01:49   Besides, it was a Saturday in the middle of the afternoon,
01:52   so I had a little hope that there would be people passing by, but unfortunately, they didn’t.
01:58   So a neighbor arrives, she “saves” you, in quotes. You said she couldn’t help you. Why?
02:05   She didn’t understand what was going on? —I think that yes, she didn’t understand
02:08   what was going on, and secondly she had a taxi to take
02:11   because she had to go on vacation, and perhaps, that was a little more important
02:14   than bringing aid to a person. —So you blame her?
02:18   A little bit. At the same time she was my savior, so at the moment
02:21   I can’t necessarily blame her, but it’s true that it’s still a citizen’s basic duty to help others.
02:28   The man left, the man fled, and then he was arrested a few hours later on the Champs-Élysées.
02:36   Exactly, in fact there was already a… —You had obviously described him to the police.
02:40   I had described him, he had also taken my shopping bag, so they were able to identify him easily,
02:45   and since he had attacked another person just before me,
02:49   who had a camera, they were able to find him very easily. He was walking around
02:52   on the Champs-Elysées, just like that.
02:55   So he must not have been afraid of the police, since he remained in the same neighborhood.
03:01   Yes. —He wasn’t very far from Champs-Elysées, it’s the 8th arrondissement,
03:05   and he stayed in the same neighborhood, he was walking around with your shopping bag.
03:09   Exactly. It turned out that he was under OQTF, which is the obligation, in quotes,
03:14   to leave French territory. I say “in quotes” because it’s applied only in less than 7% of cases.
03:20   And since 2001 he has been under OQTF, and he still was on the French territory, and that’s
03:27   what makes you angry. You’re not the only one, everyone is angry, but you really suffered it.
03:32   Yes, that’s really it, and in the end I realize that I’m not the only one who was raped,
03:37   and precisely by such a person. I think that we need to apply the laws,
03:41   and today it’s not done. So just being able to make things move
03:44   is what I am trying to do on my own. —Yes, under OQTF since 2021, I said 2022,
03:48   it’s 2021 actually. Do you blame the government?
03:53   Yes, in the end, because they just didn’t do their job, and if it had been applied better,
03:59   if the laws were a little more strict, maybe this person wouldn’t have raped me,
04:06   he wouldn’t have raped the other girl. And often
04:09   the people who are under OQTF commit a lot of crimes.
04:16   And if it really had been applied, there would not be such problems. —So you said
04:19   he had assaulted another young woman, a few moments before.
04:24   You got in touch with this young woman? —Yes, so when we got to the police,
04:27   we ran into each other, and then we tried to get together woman-to-woman,
04:32   and to be able to support each other a little.
04:37   So it’s a little sad, but at least I feel less alone.
04:42   Why did you decide to talk? This is a question we ask to ourselves. Why did you decide to talk?
04:51   First of all to denounce the OQTF system, and I would like the laws to be applied
04:55   a little more, and secondly to be able to convey a message of prevention
05:00   for women, because today I think one isn’t really safe in Paris
05:04   or in the major cities of France. And at least to warn them to be careful.
05:09   I warn them to be careful, to look over their shoulders, to take a taxi rather than
05:13   the subway late at night. And then to be accompanied all the time, to really be careful.
05:19   What would you have done differently? Would you have looked behind you,
05:23   at who was following you? What would you have done?
05:28   Yes, I would have looked behind me before going home, but then: is it normal
05:32   to need to look behind while returning home, at 4:30 pm? I’m not necessarily sure, either.
05:38   How have you been living since the attack? You don’t have to answer me,
05:44   but it is a question we ask ourselves. How does someone live after having suffered
05:49   such an attack? —It’s quite complicated, because you are very dissociated from your body,
05:54   so at first you don’t necessarily understand what’s going on, but then there is a bit
05:58   of a descent into hell. And as long as the process is not over, there are a lot
06:02   of traumas, flashbacks that come back, I can’t leave home alone, I have to take
06:09   a taxi, I can’t take the subway, I can’t go for a coffee with my friends, so it is
06:13   quite problematic, socially speaking. —Are you being medically monitored?
06:17   Yes, I am being monitored by a psychologist and a psychiatrist, but the support
06:23   is really very poorly organized, and I had to find the doctors on my own.
06:28   Thank you very much, Claire. Thank you for coming here this morning to testify
06:32   in the morning session of Cnews.
 

Video transcript #2:

00:00   As I learned he was under OQTF [obligation to leave French territory], I was already quite outraged
00:03   by the fact that the government didn’t do its work. Today, women who are raped — there are
00:06   many of them every minute in France — three out of four are raped by this kind of individual.
00:10   Of course. —Hello. By the way, thank you very much, Mr. Zemmour.
00:13   In fact, what happened to me, it was a Saturday, Saturday, November 11th.
00:17   Suddenly — in the middle of the afternoon, I had gone shopping;
00:21   I live in the 8th arrondissement of Paris —
00:24   and what happened is that as I was returning home, a man followed me.
00:28   And as soon as I crossed the entrance hall, he jumped on me and attacked me.
00:34   He said he would kill me. And in fact, after that, he wanted…
00:39   At first, I thought he just wanted to steal my stuff,
00:43   except that, in fact, he wanted more.
00:46   So he raped me.
00:51   It lasted a very, very long time. He said “I’m going to kill you” repeatedly.
00:57   He even really held me very, very tight on my mouth, he put his hands on my mouth,
01:01   he strangled me, too. Very, very hard.
01:05   And in fact, I thought he really was going to kill me.
01:09   And that, in any case, the only way for me to get through it,
01:12   so that I wouldn’t die, was to do as I was told.
01:15   I was half naked in my entrance hall, blood-soaked.
01:20   And then he walked away, as if he had done nothing?
01:23   So he had already gone away just like that, as if nothing had happened.
01:26   And given that I had described this individual to the police,
01:29   and there was a girl who had suffered the same attack, ten minutes away walking from my house,
01:33   in the 17th [arrondissement], an hour before, they were able to recognize the person.
01:37   And in fact this person was walking around on the Champs-Élysées. So, he comes from Central Africa,
01:41   from what I understood. He is 25 years old.
01:44   And you were telling me that he was already under OQTF?
01:47   Exactly. —He was supposed to be expelled. An illegal supposed to be expelled.
01:51   As I learned that he was under OQTF, I was already quite outraged by the fact
01:54   that the government didn’t do its work. And I said to myself that if it had been done before that,
01:58   it wouldn’t have happened. And the problem is that today, the women who are raped —
02:04   there are many of them every minute in France — three out of four are raped
02:07   by this kind of individual, unfortunately. So, to be able to fight for that,
02:11   to be able to convey a much stronger message on this, is one of my priorities today.
02:15   The government must protect you. —Exactly.
02:18   It’s not up to you to be careful. On the contrary, you lived your life as usual,
02:22   and it was quite logical. What is not logical is that this African,
02:26   first, is in France and second, is not yet gone.
02:30   It’s not your fault. And you are absolutely not guilty.
02:35   No, what we need to do, on the contrary, is to say:
02:38   What do we have to do so that these people are no longer on French territory?
02:42   Because they have nothing to do with it. —Exactly.
02:46   Claire wished to meet Eric Zemmour, after watching the video of Christine,
02:49   who had come to the Reconquête Party headquarters to shed some light
02:54   on the murder of her sister-in-law by a migrant. We remain on the side
02:57   of the victims of these crazy policies.
 

7 thoughts on “A Calvary in the 8th Arrondissement

  1. And here we have a cultural enrichment caught on camera that happened in Spain, and it is stated that 52% of CONVICTED Rapes are done by foreigners, who only make 11% of the population.
    I guess it’s not the English or German pensioners that are living in Spain that are perpetrating those rapes, and we all know who’s responsible for these atrocities to happen.
    The Spanish Government puppeticians and the NGO’s of the Globalists in this case.

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/l5PXzEKKJ98?feature=share

  2. ….and the stupid French keep voting for Macron. They must like their women being raped. Same as the Brits as Tommy Robinson has pointed out for years.

    There is one reason this doesn’t happen on a mass scale “yet” in the U.S. – we would shoot the rapists well before the cops got there.

  3. “I can’t leave home alone, I have to take a taxi, I can’t take the subway, I can’t go for a coffee with my friends”

    — That’s de facto Sharia law for women. Which is a/the central goal of the Rape Jihad.

  4. “I was already quite outraged by the fact that the government didn’t do its work.”

    — Oh, it did … That’s why she was raped.

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