- Hunter shines as Hawks top Cavs again
- Southampton denied shock Brighton win by dubious VAR call
- Alarm over high rate of HIV infections among young women, girls
- Swiss unveil Euro 2025 mascot Maddli
- Bears fire coach Eberflus after latest agonizing NFL defeat
- Rallies mark one month since Spain's catastrophic floods
- Arnault family's Paris FC takeover completed
- Georgian police stage new crackdown on pro-EU protestors
- 'We're messing up:' Uruguay icon Mujica on strongman rule in Latin America
- Liverpool dealt Konate injury blow
- Van Nistelrooy appointed Leicester manager
- Verstappen brought back to earth in Doha after F1 title party
- Global wine output to hit lowest level since 1961
- Norris boosts McLaren title hopes with sprint pole
- Big-hitting Stubbs takes satisfaction from grinding out Test century
- Romania recounts presidential ballots as parliamentary vote looms
- French skipper Dalin leads as Vendee Globe passes Cape of Good Hope
- Chelsea not in Premier League title race, says Maresca
- Brazil's Bolsonaro aims to ride Trump wave back to office: WSJ
- France requests transfer of death row convict held in Indonesia: minister
- 'Mamie Charge': Migrants find safe haven in Frenchwoman's garage
- Iconic Uruguayan ex-leader hails country's swing left as 'farewell gift'
- Thousands rally in Georgia after violent police crackdown on pro-EU protesters
- Shared experiences make Murray 'perfect coach', says Djokovic
- Iran, Europeans to keep talking as tensions ratchet up
- Inflation-wary US consumers flock to 'Black Friday' deals
- France shows off restored Notre Dame after 'impossible' restoration
- South African bowlers strike after Sri Lanka set big target
- Namibia reopens polls after election chaos in ruling party test
- Georgia police arrest dozens in clashes with pro-EU protesters
- US stocks rise on Black Friday
- Leclerc on top for Ferrari in Qatar GP practice
- Jihadists, allies enter Syria's second city in lightning assault
- Amorim puts faith in Mount to turn around Man Utd career
- Guardiola will not 'run' from Man City rebuild
- Assisted dying campaigners, opponents rally at UK parliament
- Durable prop Healy set to carve name in Irish rugby history
- Macron unveils Notre Dame after 'impossible' restoration
- Traumatised Spain marks one month since catastrophic floods
- Yen rallies, euro up on rising inflation data
- Attack-minded Spurs boss Postecoglou says: 'You'll miss me when I'm gone'
- Syria jihadists, allies shell major city Aleppo in shock offensive
- Macron inspects 'sublime' Notre Dame after reconstruction
- Arsenal must be near-perfect to catch Liverpool, says Arteta
- Arrests, intimidation stoke fear in Pakistan's politics
- Showdown looms on plastic treaty days before deadline
- Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala: the WTO's trailblazing motivator
- WTO chief reappointed as Trump threat looms
- US landmine offer to Ukraine throws treaty into 'crisis': campaign group
- British MPs debate contentious assisted dying law
Paris police dismantle crack users' camp
Paris police on Wednesday dismantled a camp that is home to over 100 crack users, the latest move in a campaign that has repeatedly displaced the addicts around the capital.
French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin wrote on Twitter as the evacuation got under way that this time, "1,000 officers will be deployed to prevent the camp from reforming somewhere else".
An AFP journalist saw large numbers of police surround the rubbish-strewn camp from 7:00 am (0500 GMT) in Square Forceval in northeast Paris, with police chief Laurent Nunez on the scene.
Over the past two years, successive evacuations have moved crack users from the Stalingrad square on the city's Saint-Martin canal, first to a nearby park, and then to their current site alongside the French capital's ring road.
Tackling the city's crack problem -- visible on the streets for the past three decades -- has proved difficult due to the addictiveness of the drug, a cocaine derivative that sells for as little as 10 euros ($9.90) per dose.
Darmanin, a law-and-order hardliner, has given newly-installed Paris police chief Nunez a single year to wipe out crack in the capital.
The interior ministry said that inhabitants of the camp wanted by police would be arrested, while foreigners without papers would be detained awaiting deportation.
"Other occupants will be directed towards accommodation structures with medical and social assistance, or to medical facilities," the ministry added.
Aid groups say that between 300 and 400 people spend time in the camp during the day and around 150 at night, with up to 40 percent of them women.
Dealers sold crack "rocks" openly among the groups of users.
As at other sites where the addicts have gathered, local residents have complained of assaults, thefts and other disruption since their arrival.
Around 500 people demonstrated last month to mark the camp being in place for a year and demand its removal.
M.Odermatt--BTB