Murder of Lyhanna: Rush to blame French judiciary, 'no one at political level taking responsibility'
Haxie Meyers-Belkin is pleased to welcome Renaud Foucart, Senior Lecturer in Economics at the Lancaster University. According to Foucart, the French parliament hearings are fundamentally driven by a desire to establish responsibility in the wake of a national tragedy that has spa
Haxie Meyers-Belkin is pleased to welcome Renaud Foucart, Senior Lecturer in Economics at the Lancaster University. According to Foucart, the French parliament hearings are fundamentally driven by a desire to establish responsibility in the wake of a national tragedy that has sparked outrage across France.ย He argues that French society may be entering a period of reassessment regarding safeguarding standards, parental responsibility, and the balance between children's freedom and security. And stronger measures may come at a social cost, potentially signalling "the end of innocence or the end of children roaming freely," a trade-off that many societies are increasingly confronting.
This report comes from France 24. The story centres on Murder of Lyhanna: Rush to blame French judiciary, 'no one at political level taking responsibility'. Full coverage and background context is available at the original source. Readers seeking more detail on this developing topic are encouraged to follow updates from France 24 and related outlets covering this beat.

