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(en) France, UCL Press Release - Death of a Fascist in Lyon: More Than Ever, the Urgency of Antifascism (ca, de, fr, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]
Date
Tue, 24 Mar 2026 08:09:48 +0200
Following the death of a fascist activist in Lyon, the far right and its
allies are attempting to exploit this event to criminalize antifascism.
Meanwhile, the institutional left is content to condemn, in generic
terms, "all violence." More than ever, we must stand together to affirm
the urgent need for a grassroots antifascism, and the imperative for our
working class to defend itself against the violence of the far right.
On the evening of Thursday, February 12, Quentin Deranque, a fascist
activist, was hospitalized in serious condition. A member of the
neo-fascist group Les Allobroges Bourgoin and of the security service of
Némésis, he had also been involved with Action Française. His death was
confirmed 48 hours later, just hours before the press published
testimonies from shopkeepers and residents corroborating a video filmed
from a window showing a beating following a pitched battle. Serious
journalistic investigations, which do not simply parrot the far-right
narrative, are still underway, and many questions remain unanswered. In
any case, this death cannot be analyzed politically outside the context
that led to the event.
For years, numerous associations, trade unions, political parties,
residents, and shopkeepers in Lyon have been mobilizing about the
increase in violence perpetrated by the far right. How many attacks have
there been on people of color? On LGBTQ+ people? On trade unionists? On
activists or political figures? On local residents? How many beatings?
How many armed attacks? How many hospitalizations?
For years, we have collectively warned about the establishment of
fascist groups, operating openly, training in a combat gym next to the
La Traboule bar, or in paramilitary summer camps, about the numerous
demonstrations inciting hatred, and also about the complicity of the
authorities. Indeed, the police are regularly absent from events like
Thursday's, while far-right conferences are always protected by a
particularly large security detail.
While the activists of Némésis generate buzz by organizing media-driven
"happenings," neo-fascist militants in Lyon are preparing to kill and
die for their cause. Their leaders are training radicalized and
disciplined fighters to send to the front lines to confront the security
forces that all of Lyon's social movements are forced to deploy for
their own protection.
That antifascist groups have formed in Lyon over the years to
participate in collective and grassroots self-defense is undeniable.
The fate of the young fascist activist has given the far right an
opportunity to construct the image of a martyr and to escalate its
violence. In the days following Thursday evening, numerous premises
belonging to various left-wing trade unions and political organizations
across France were vandalized, including those of La France Insoumise
(LFI) but also those of Solidaires Rhône, as well as La Plume Noire, a
self-managed bookstore run by the UCL in Lyon, which had already been
attacked many times. Swastikas were spray-painted in the Place de la
République in Paris, and Celtic crosses throughout France. Threats and
calls for physical violence against activists have multiplied, some of
whom have been publicly identified and publicly shamed. What the
far-right now hopes for is to be able to carry out their atrocities with
renewed intensity, relying on the mendacious narrative of "far-left
terrorism" in order to gain political legitimacy.
The left-wing parties and political figures who denounced "all forms of
physical violence" have fallen into the trap set by the far right. This
naive pacifist rhetoric equates fascist violence that has persisted for
over fifteen years in Lyon, targeting anything that displeases white
supremacists, with an event that fuels a despicable political campaign
to criminalize antifascism. Jean Messiha calls for "eradicating the
antifascist scum," the far-right calls for creating new Clément Mérics,
and right-wing and far-right elected officials call for classifying
antifa groups as terrorists. And what is the left doing? It sends its
condolences to the victim's "friends" and criminalizes antifascism. Some
even go so far as to empty the word fascist of all political substance
by making it a simple synonym for "violence" which could then be
attributed to anyone, including anti-fascists.
UCL will not succumb to this comfortable but inconsistent demagoguery.
We forcefully reiterate a persistent reality: it is primarily the far
right that kills and instigates this climate of violence, in Lyon, in
France, and throughout the world. We strongly condemn the reversal of
the situation that the far right is attempting to impose by referring to
a "lynching," a term associated with the mass racist attacks targeting
Black people in the United States. Using it to describe the blows
received by a white supremacist is a deadly and racist reversal.
Yes, the far right kills: drowned in the Deule River, Brahim Bouraam,
Clément Méric, Federico Aramburu, Mahamadou Cissé, Djamel Bendjaballah,
Rochdi Lakhsassi, Hichem Miraoui, killed by five bullets in
Puget-sur-Argens in 2025... Did the murdered individuals have to be
far-right to elicit a national tribute? Where are the condolences for
the victims and the national tributes when Frédéric Grochain, a Kanak
political prisoner, dies in his cell thousands of kilometers from his
homeland on February 6th? Where are the tears from the political parties
and the media that mourned Quentin Deranque after the racist murder of
Ismaël Aali in early 2026 in the same town?
UCL defends a social and popular antifascism based on building mass
social movements, whose strength lies in numbers, not violence. However,
to renounce confrontation on principle is to condemn ourselves to the
impossibility of activism in the public sphere. If we refuse to protect
our demonstrations, our public meetings, our distribution of leaflets,
then we are refusing to intervene politically, because the far right
will not refrain from attacking us, and this is why it cannot be
considered a political ideology like any other.
By singling out "the antifas" for public condemnation, these elements of
the parliamentary left are howling with the wolves. They are putting
themselves in a position where they will no longer be able to defend
antifascist movements threatened by state repression.
Yet, more than ever, we need to stand together and hold the line.
Facing the fascists, not a step backward.
Libertarian Communist Union, February 17, 2026.
https://www.unioncommunistelibertaire.org/?Mort-d-un-fasciste-a-Lyon-plus-que-jamais-l-urgence-de-l-antifascisme
_________________________________________
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