France Rocked By massive Violence And Sexual Assault of children

Paris police are investigating over 100 cases of school abuses across the city. Photo: Gemini.

IBNS-CMEDIA: In a shocking incident, Paris police are investigating more than 100 allegations of physical violence, mistreatment, and sexual assault against young children in nurseries, daycare centers, and primary schools across the city, media reports said.

The sweeping probe highlights major vulnerabilities in the capital’s public school oversight system, with cases involving victims as young as 3 years old.

Paris’s top prosecutor, Laure Beccuau, confirmed to the media the scale of the ongoing investigation. “We have investigations underway in 84 preschools, about 20 primary schools and about 10 daycare centres,” Beccuau stated.

Tragic signs reveal severe abuse

In one of the harrowing experiences, a three-year-old boy in western Paris froze outside his school gates, falling into a distressed, trance-like state and refusing to go inside.

His weeping mother and the school’s headteacher—who ultimately forced the boy through the gates—did not understand his terror at the time. It was later alleged that the child had been raped by a school monitor, media reports said.

Lawyer Louis Cailliez, who represents the boy’s family alongside another affected family, filed official police complaints regarding the incident.

According to Cailliez, the same monitor is also accused of raping a three-year-old girl at a different nursery school, after previously being transferred due to complaints of physical violence.

Legal proceedings are rapidly moving forward. A trial is set to begin next week for a monitor accused of sexually abusing five children between the ages of three and five.

Additionally, a verdict is expected next month in a separate case involving a 47-year-old monitor accused of abusing nine 10-year-old girls.

Systemic flaws in staff recruitment

The administrative fallout has been swift. Paris City Hall suspended 78 school monitors, 31 of whom are specifically suspected of sexual abuse.

The crisis has cast a harsh light on the role of “school monitors”—adults hired to oversee children during lunch breaks, rest periods, and after-school activities.

In many instances, these individuals spend more time with young children than classroom teachers do.

Unlike certified teachers, monitors are:

  • Recruited by local municipal councils rather than the French Education Ministry.
  • Frequently hired on casual, hourly contracts.
  • Employed with little to no formal training or professional qualifications.

Because nursery school is compulsory in France from the age of three, these monitors are a routine, daily presence for millions of children up to age 11.

Beyond the sexual assault cases, parents across France have documented widespread systemic mistreatment, including children being aggressively shouted at, pushed, having their hair pulled, being denied food, or being forced to eat until they became physically sick.

Families demand accountability

Parent advocacy groups state they raised explicit warnings about these safety gaps for years, only to be ignored.

They argue that lax recruitment and vetting procedures allowed abusive individuals to remain in close contact with vulnerable children.

“It’s a massive scandal,” said Florian Lastelle, a lawyer representing three Paris families who filed police complaints. “The state school system is a source of pride in this country, but unfortunately, in France today it’s not possible to say that the public service guarantees children’s safety.”

City Hall responds with €20 million emergency plan

In response to the growing public outcry, the newly appointed Mayor of Paris, Emmanuel Grégoire, announced a €20 million emergency plan aimed at restructuring the school monitor system.

Grégoire, who has shared publicly that he was sexually abused by a school monitor during his own childhood, acknowledged that the city failed to see the broader pattern of danger.

“If there was a collective mistake, it was to treat these incidents as isolated when in fact they point to a systemic risk, and perhaps even a systemic code of silence,” Grégoire said, labeling the administrative failures a “major dysfunction.”