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French Streets Descend Into Chaos as Drug War Claims Another Life

A 15-year-old is dead in Nantes after a brazen, automatic-weapon attack, highlighting the failure of the state to contain rampant drug trafficking.

Foreign PolicyPublished May 15, 2026 at 12:33 PMProcessed May 15, 2026 at 1:19 PM
Four uniformed French police stand in front of a row of cars, with a police tape in the foreground, near the scene of the shooting of three boys in the city of Nantes.

The streets of France are becoming increasingly lawless as a violent drug war continues to claim young lives. In the latest incident in Nantes, a 15-year-old boy was killed and a 13-year-old was seriously injured when attackers wearing balaclavas opened fire with automatic weapons.

While family members insist the victims were innocent bystanders, French authorities have confirmed the attack is directly linked to the country's escalating drug trafficking crisis. Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez has vowed to continue the fight against these criminal syndicates, yet the reality on the ground remains grim.

This tragedy follows another fatal shooting in the same area just last month, proving that local efforts—including youth curfews—are failing to stem the tide of violence.

With the Ministry of Justice reporting that teenage involvement in the illegal drug trade has surged four-fold over the last eight years, it is clear that the current approach is not enough to protect citizens from the criminal plague consuming French neighborhoods.

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