Eleven days after the attack in prison of Yvan Colonna, a large demonstration is expected, Sunday March 13 in the afternoon, in Bastia, between anger and call for calm, with the watchword "Truth and justice" for the independence activist, always between life and death.

Near the Bastia courthouse, from where the procession is to start in the direction of the prefecture, the streets have been closed, the banks secured and the ATMs protected by wooden panels.

Similarly, garbage containers, regularly used by some demonstrators to light fires, have been removed.

Under a fine and cold rain, the demonstrators already on the spot were for some draped in Corsican flags.

The leading banner of the procession had not yet been deployed.

Just before the start of the demonstration, Bastia prosecutor Arnaud Viornery clarified that "about 300 Molotov cocktails were discovered in a public space" in the city.

This demonstration was initiated by nationalist student unions, joined by all the nationalist parties on the island, as for the rally in Corte last Sunday, which brought together 4,200 people according to the authorities, 15,000 according to the organizers.

"We came for what is happening in Corsica, the French state which denies the Corsican people, for the release of all Corsican prisoners", explained to AFP Marité Costa, 58, already present in Corte last Sunday. : "We say 'Young people are thugs', but they're not thugs, they fight, it's thanks to them that things have moved, because Macron, he doesn't care , even one month before the elections.

Strong tensions in Corsica

The day after the attack on Yvan Colonna at the central house in Arles, in the Bouches-du-Rhône, on March 2, rallies took place all over the island, against a background of questions about the conditions of this attack targeting this Corsican independence activist who had long demanded his reconciliation in a prison on the island.

This week, the violence intensified with in particular the intrusion of fifteen demonstrators on Wednesday evening into the courthouse in Ajaccio, which they ransacked and tried to set on fire.

On Friday, Prime Minister Jean Castex tried to calm the situation by announcing the lifting of the status of "particularly guarded detainee" (DPS) of Pierre Alessandri and Alain Ferrandi, two other members of the "Érignac commando" still detained on the continent.

It is this status that blocked the rapprochement of the three men in a Corsican prison.

But this gesture, after the lifting of the DPS status of Yvan Colonna on Tuesday, received as a provocation in Corsica, the man being today between life and death, did not lower the tension in the Isle.

With AFP

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