Police arresting nine ultraleft suspects, including an LFI aide, outside Sciences Po Lyon after nationalist militant Quentin Deranque's fatal assault.
Police arresting nine ultraleft suspects, including an LFI aide, outside Sciences Po Lyon after nationalist militant Quentin Deranque's fatal assault.
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Nine suspects arrested in probe into Quentin Deranque's death in Lyon

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Quentin Deranque, a 23-year-old nationalist militant, died on Saturday February 14, 2026, following an assault on Thursday evening in Lyon, on the sidelines of a conference by LFI MEP Rima Hassan at Sciences Po. Nine suspects, including parliamentary aide Jacques-Élie Favrot to LFI deputy Raphaël Arnault, were arrested on Tuesday, most being former members of the ultraleft group Jeune Garde, dissolved in 2025.

On February 12, 2026, around 6 p.m., clashes pitted ultraleft and ultraright militants near Sciences Po Lyon, during a conference organized by the Eurôka association with Rima Hassan. Quentin Deranque, a member of the identitarian collective Némésis, found himself isolated with two others and was thrown to the ground, then beaten by at least six masked and hooded individuals, according to Lyon prosecutor Thierry Dran. Suffering from a major head trauma and a right temporal fracture, he was taken to hospital and declared dead two days later.

The investigation for 'homicide volontaire' and 'aggravated violence' identified six main suspects, all former members of Jeune Garde, an antifascist group founded in 2018 by Raphaël Arnault, LFI deputy convicted in 2022 to four months' suspended prison for voluntary violence in assembly. Nine arrests took place on Tuesday February 17: five in the afternoon and four in the evening, in the Lyon region, Haute-Loire, Drôme, and Aisne. Among them, Jacques-Élie Favrot, 25, aide to Raphaël Arnault, present on site that evening. Arnault announced on X that he had initiated proceedings to end Favrot's contract, who has ceased parliamentary activities.

At the National Assembly, a minute of silence was observed on Tuesday before questions to the government. Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu urged LFI to 'clean your ranks', recalling the arrest of a parliamentary aide. 'Without prejudging the outcome of the investigation and infringing on the presumption of innocence, I reiterate that yes, cleaning must be done in your ranks. And quickly', he wrote on X. Jean-Luc Mélenchon rejected these 'lessons', stating: 'We do not accept the lessons given to us by Mr. the Prime Minister'. Mathilde Panot, LFI leader, denounced an 'imaginary moral responsibility' and criticized the lack of security despite alerts on Némésis's presence. Gérald Darmanin accused: 'Jeune Garde kills, and La France insoumise should condemn it'. Olivier Faure (PS) judged that LFI 'cannot maintain the slightest ambiguity with any violent movement'.

Higher Education Minister Philippe Baptiste announced there would be no more university meetings in case of risks to public order, via a circular to prefects and rectors.

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Discussions on X regarding the arrests of nine suspects, including LFI aide Jacques-Élie Favrot and former Jeune Garde members, in the death of nationalist Quentin Deranque are dominated by right-wing outrage condemning ultraleft violence and demanding accountability from LFI and Raphaël Arnault. High-engagement posts identify suspects and highlight Arnault's past convictions. Left-leaning users reject partisan politicization, urge non-violence, and report facts neutrally. Skepticism targets media framing of the victim as far-right.

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Courtroom illustration depicting seven suspects charged with homicide in the death of Quentin Deranque in Lyon, France.
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Seven suspects charged with homicide in Quentin Deranque's death

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One week after the fatal lynching of 23-year-old Quentin Deranque in Lyon, seven suspects were charged Thursday evening, six with voluntary homicide and one with complicity by instigation. The accused, aged 20 to 26 and linked to the ultraleft movement, were placed in provisional detention. The case has sparked intense political debate on violence and ties to La France insoumise.

Quentin D., a 23-year-old student close to nationalist circles, died on Saturday, February 14, 2026, from injuries sustained in a violent assault Thursday evening in Lyon, during a conference by LFI MEP Rima Hassan. The incident, involving antifascist militants according to multiple sources, has sparked intense political reactions, with unanimous condemnations of violence and mutual accusations between far-right and far-left groups. An investigation is underway to identify the perpetrators.

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Two men aged 22 and 26 were arrested on March 4 in connection with the death of Quentin Deranque, a 23-year-old far-right militant killed on February 12 in Lyon by an extreme-left group. The suspects are in custody on charges of organized band murder and complicity. The case stems from violent clashes near Sciences Po Lyon during a conference by MEP Rima Hassan.

The Paris prosecutor's office has opened an inquiry into suspicions of the reconstitution of the antifascist group La Jeune Garde, dissolved in June 2025, following a report from the Interior Ministry. This comes ten days after the death of far-right militant Quentin Deranque, beaten to death in Lyon by ultragauche members. Emmanuel Macron met with ministers and intelligence services to address violent groups linked to political parties.

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Following the death of far-right militant Quentin Deranque in Lyon on February 14, Republicans are calling for a political isolation of La France insoumise (LFI), accused of fostering violence. LFI leaders deny any responsibility and remain open to left-wing alliances for the 2026 municipal elections. The Socialist Party is hesitant on these proposals due to the alleged involvement of an LFI deputy's staff in the case.

The French government held an emergency meeting at the Élysée on November 18, 2025, to intensify the fight against narcotraffic following the assassination of Mehdi Kessaci, brother of an anti-drug activist, described as an 'intimidation crime'. Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez highlighted that traffickers are reacting to blows from law enforcement. Emmanuel Macron plans a visit to Marseille mid-December.

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Nearly 6,200 people gathered in Marseille on Saturday to pay homage to Mehdi Kessaci, killed on November 13 by two motorbike assassins. The event, organized by the Conscience association founded by his brother Amine, was marked by emotion and calls for justice against narcotrafficking. Politicians from all sides joined the silent white march.

 

 

 

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