A peaceful demonstration on the Champs-Élysées in Paris with around 30,000 Algerians ended 60 years ago in a massacre, which was silenced for many years. Up to 200 people may have been killed.
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The official death toll after the bloody night was three, of which two were Algerians. Later, historians have estimated that between 50 and 200 people were killed. The reason for the uncertain death toll is, among other things, that French police threw many of the victims into the river Seine.
The demonstration took place on October 17, 1961 and was aimed at a curfew that only applied to people with a background from Algeria, and which had been introduced barely two weeks earlier.
Most of the participants had traveled to the city center from poor suburbs north and east of Paris to show their opposition to what they perceived as a deeply unjust coercive measure.
Among the participants were men, women and children, and many of them were dressed in their best clothes for the occasion.