Article 658KX In a deserted courtroom, the grim details of the Nice atrocity go mostly unnoticed | Robert McLiam Wilson

In a deserted courtroom, the grim details of the Nice atrocity go mostly unnoticed | Robert McLiam Wilson

by
Robert McLiam Wilson
from US news | The Guardian on (#658KX)
Eighty-six people died in the 2016 tragedy, yet compassion and empathy have become exhausted

In Paris, a trial is taking place concerning the 14 July 2016 attack in Nice when a man drove a truck into a crowd of families attending a firework display. The three-month trial, due to end in early December, is of eight associates of Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel accused of assisting him in the attack, when a 19-tonne cargo truck was deliberately driven into people celebrating Bastille Day on the Promenade des Anglais. A total of 86 people were killed, including 15 children. More than 450 were injured. You'd think it would be a big deal. You would be wrong.

I've been reporting on the trial for the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. In the church-like Palais de Justice, where the public can watch the trial on large screens, the average attendance is around six. One afternoon there were only two of us, me and a sweet-faced old lady whispering a melancholy but urgent commentary to herself.

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