Doria Chouviat, wife of the delivery man who died on January 12, 2020. - GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT / AFP

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Cédric Chouviat affair: The delivery man who died in Paris after his arrest repeated "J'étouffe" seven times

"Stop", "I stop", then "I stifle" pronounced seven times: these are the words of Cédric Chouviat during the 22 seconds of his arrest, according to an expert report dated April 21, revealed by  Le Monde  and Mediapart. Cédric Chouviat, who died following a police check in early January in Paris, said seven times that he was suffocating the four police officers now under threat of being charged.

On January 3, Cédric Chouviat, a 42-year-old father working as a delivery man, had suffered a heart attack near the Eiffel Tower after being tackled on the ground, helmet on his head, by three police officers after '' a tense roadside check. Transported in critical condition to the hospital, he died on January 5 as a result of asphyxia "with fracture of the larynx", according to the first elements of the autopsy communicated by the parquet floor of Paris, which had opened a judicial investigation for "manslaughter".

Loss of motivation, fear for his job ... Companies face employee uncertainty after the

Impossible to pretend that nothing had happened and resume office life as before confinement. The coronavirus crisis has disrupted the personal and professional lives of employees. And the consequences are already being felt. According tobarometer * on the psychological and physical health of employees in the quality of life consulting firm Human footprint, 42% of employees were in psychological distress a few weeks after deconfinement. “The coronavirus crisis was a shock for employees who felt vulnerable physically and psychologically. They will be permanently marked, ”comments Christophe Nguyen, occupational psychologist and co-founder of Empreinte humaine.

Google will pin misleading images to fight

A new measure against disinformation. The giant Google will add labels to the images, to signal if they are misleading, the company announced Monday. The new “Fact Check” tags will appear in the photo and video results on the search engine. In its press release, Google gives the example of photos which claim to show, wrongly, sharks swimming on the streets of Houston after a hurricane in 2017. These untrue content had widely circulated on the web.

  • Deconfinement
  • Fake news
  • Google
  • Police violence
  • Cedric Chouviat
  • Society