Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jul 3
France Orders Review of 70,000 Child Cases After 11-Year-Old Lyhanna Killing
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jul 3

France Orders Review of 70,000 Child Cases After 11-Year-Old Lyhanna Killing

3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jul 3

Summary

  • Gérald Darmanin ordered prosecutors to re-examine about 70,000 unsolved cases involving children by July 14 after outrage over the Lyhanna case.
  • The backlash intensified when prosecutors said the suspect in the 11-year-old's killing had faced several prior accusations of sexual violence against young girls but had never been questioned by police.
  • A preliminary inspection has already pointed to mistakes in Lyhanna's case, and Darmanin raised the possibility that magistrates could be dismissed over judicial failings.
  • The case has sharpened scrutiny of France's wider system: it has about 3.2 prosecutors per 100,000 people, and roughly 92% to 94% of reported rape cases do not lead to prosecution.
  • That pressure builds on earlier official warnings, including a 2023 child-abuse commission report whose priority measures were largely unimplemented and a 2024 alert of a "systemic crisis" in child protection.

Insights

A suspect with prior complaints, a system long condemned. Is this tragedy enough to fix France's broken child protection?
With 70,000 cases under review, is France's justice system facing true reform or just a temporary political fix?