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Funeral and march held for murdered French-Armenian teenager

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  • Funeral and march held for murdered French-Armenian teenager

    Funeral and march held for murdered French-Armenian teenager

    17:27 19/01/2015 >> SOCIETY


    Funeral services were held this week at the Armenian Cathedral of
    Marseille for Michaël Assaturyan, a 16-year-old French-Armenian
    student who was murdered on Jan. 12, reported Nouvelles d'Armenie,
    according to The Armenian Weekly.

    An estimated 2,500 people gathered on Jan. 16 to march and mourn the
    loss of the teenager; sources put the number at as high as 4,000.

    Among those present were Mayor of Marseille Jean-Claude Gaudin, along
    with Deputies Didier Parakian and Martine Vassel, Parliamentarian
    Valerie Boyer, Senators Jean-Noel Guerini and Bruno Gilles, Member of
    the French National Assembly Dominique Tian, and Councilman Garo
    Hovsepian, as well as leaders of the Armenian community--from clergy to
    political activists.

    Assaturyan, who attended high school in Marseille, was killed on Jan.
    12 just outside school grounds. The suspects are two brothers--17 and
    18 years old--who attacked Assaturyan after their sister had an
    argument with him during a basketball game in gym class. Assaturyan
    was stabbed four times, cutting a main artery, revealed French police.

    Both brothers surrendered to police. According to sources, the younger
    brother has a violent record that includes robbery and assault, for
    which he was imprisoned in 2013. Police also have the sister in
    custody, reported Nouvelles d'Armenie.

    The march was in response to a call by the Coordination Council of
    Armenian Organizations of France (CCAF).

    Marching down Marseille's historic La Canebière in the old quarter of
    Marseille, mourners gathered at the Old Port around a large chalk
    drawing of an Armenian cross encircled with flowers, and the words,
    "Je suis Michaël" ("I am Michael") above it. White roses in hand, some
    wore shirts that read "Misha," short for Michaël; others held signs
    that read, "I am Michaël."


    http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2015/01/19/marseille/




    From: A. Papazian
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