cameras can protests? i think that body cameras can be protests? i think that body cameras can be useful- protests? i think that body cameras can be useful to l cameras can be useful to mitigate violence but we have to think more broadly about the culture of policing in france and the united states but these individuals, as a citizen and an innocent victim, so, no matter how many body cameras officers are married, as they see people like him as a threat they are going to try to justify their actions later and thatis justify their actions later and that is really a cultural issue that is really a cultural issue that needs to be addressed. i also thought it was interesting that a gofundme sought out for the police officer that shot nahel raised 700,000 euros. what does that say about divided opinions in the country? it divided opinions in the country? divided opinions in the count? ., country? it says that people like nahel country? it says that people like nahel and country? it
grandmother now pleading for peace saying she can t bear this any longer. you can see stores here near the famous champs-elysees boarding up store after store bracing for a sixth consecutive night of violence. nahel was of north african descent. activists raising questions as to whether race may have played a role. we are believing that the whole system is eaten by race systemic racism and systemic violence. reporter: and the state department issuing a security alert for americans traveling to france this summer. more than a dozen cities imposing curfews, and some public transportation services reduced. rachel? a country once again on edge tonight. ines, thank you. cia director william burns saying in a rare public address that anger in russia over the war in ukraine is helping hi agency recruit more spies. it all comes after his recent to the country. meanwhile, ukrainian forces gaining ground in that
bear this any longer. out europe editor is in paris where she has spoken to other members of nahel s family. she sent this report. this is nahel, the french algerian teen killed last week by a policeman, triggering nightly outpourings of rage by youths from similar backgrounds across france. in theirfirst on camera interview since nahel s death, his family told me they want to be very clear. translation: there are no words to - describe how we feel. we just buried a 17 year old. but we never called for hate or riots. this is not for nahel. what we want is justice. this is not for nahel. what we want isjustice. for the want is justice. for the policemen want isjustice. for the policemen it to be sentenced for nahel s execution. with tensions running so high, this family member asked us to hide her identity. translation: being a young north african, black -
translator: i blame the policemen who killed my grandson. i m the grandmother. i blame the policemen who killed my grandson. that s all i want. the police, they are here fortunately, they are here and the people who are breaking things, i tell them, stop. stop. they use nahel s death as a pretext. now they must stop. reporter: so she is calling for it to stop. she s saying, look, your mothers are using the buses you re burning. your mothers are using the town halls that you re trying to attack. they use the services of mayor s. so stop. it does seem it s a downward trajectory from here and i think from what we ve heard from people around here today, they really want to see the end of the violence. nic, can i ask, having watched this over the course of the last five or six days, there are very clear, if not perfect, correlation, analog to what we have seen in the united states, dynamics, elements what you re hearing from the grandmother,
something we would often hear. can you contextualize this moment on this particular issue and in france and why it got to this point and what happens next? reporter: yeah. last big sort of demonstrations, violence across the country, that in the moment officials are calling unprecedented was 2005. there is pent-up frustrations in the poorer neighborhoods. this is you could call it one of those neighborhoods. it s not as poor as some like where nahel lived but where people feel disadvantaged, ethnic minorities, people from arabic backgrounds, north african backgrounds feel racially profiled and targeted by the police and to a degree we have seen that on the streets, the young people being swept up by the police and frisked on the streets were typically people who appeared to be of north african or arabic dissent. the government pushes back and says that s not the issue. it s young people. their parents should take better