The permanence of LREM deputy Christophe Arend in Forbach, whose window had been broken last weekend, was again degraded in the night from Wednesday to Thursday.

The deputy, who participates in the ceremonies of the 75th anniversary of the landing of Provence, was "informed [Thursday] morning that [his] permanence had been the subject of a new aggression that night," he said.

"At this point, let the police work," said Christophe Arend, adding that his colleague would file a new complaint. A first complaint had been filed after the discovery Saturday morning of a glass broken permanence.

"Two windows were probably the object of a missile projectiles.There is no tag, no claim, we can not relate it to something particular," said the director of the departmental security Moselle, Philippe Tireloque.

The Forbach police station in charge of the investigation

"This additional aggression against my parliamentary future is nothing compared to all the people who came forward after the previous one," the member said. On the photos accompanying his tweet, we see holes in two windows framing the previously broken glass and covered with a wooden panel. The Forbach police station was charged with the investigation.

This further aggression against my parliamentary future is nothing compared to all the others that came after the previous one. # Democracy LeRL_Forbach @ @ @ afpfr fblorrainenord F3Lorraine @ @ @ ZDFsaarland Lisa_C_Huth @ sabinewachspic.twitter.com / fRqIQIZwln

- Christophe Arend (@christophearend) August 15, 2019

Permanences of deputies or premises of the party LREM were these last weeks immured, tagged, even sacked after the ratification in the National Assembly last month of Ceta, controversial treaty of free-trade between the European Union and Canada, arousing a condemnation of the entire political class.