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Stena Line to end popular France-Ireland ferry crossing
Rival operators will continue to serve Cherbourg port as passenger numbers on route increase
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Red heatwave alerts continue as storms sweep across France
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Air traffic controllers’ strike: Paris and south of France airports to face major disruption
Half of flights in Nice and Corsica, and a quarter in Paris are cancelled on July 3. Disruption is also expected on July 4 just before the French school holidays begin
French WWII Oradour memorial vandalised with denial messages
Vandals have sprayed graffiti on an entrance wall to a memorial honouring the victims of a World War II massacre, prompting outcry from France’s president, prime minister and other top politicians.

The wall of the memorial centre in Oradour-sur-Glane bears the inscription village martyr (village of martyrs), but vandals scored out the word ‘martyr’ and instead wrote ‘menteur’ - liar in English - along with other messaging that France’s interior minister deemed to be “Holocaust denying”.
Les inscriptions négationnistes à Ouradour-sur-Glane sont un crachat sur la mémoire de nos martyrs. Les services du ministère de l’Intérieur sont à la disposition du maire de la commune pour faire arrêter l’auteur de cette salissure abjecte.
— Gérald DARMANIN (@GDarmanin)
Other graffiti - which has all since been covered over - claimed, "Reynouard is right"The former professor of mathematics was struck off after producing a conspiracy-theorist film in 1997, in which he contested evidence from suvivors given at a trial in Bordeaux in 1953, and made startling claims about the events of the day.
“The Holocaust denial inscriptions in Oradour-sur-Glane spit on the memory of our martyrs. The services of the Ministry of the Interior are at the disposal of the mayor of the commune to have the author of this abject smear arrested,” Gérald Darmanin wrote.
On June 10, 1944, Oradour-sur-Glane in Haute-Vienne in Nazi-occupied France was destroyed and 642 of its inhabitants massacred by German SS troops.
In response, then-President General Charles de Gaulle ordered that the village remain in ruins, as a permanent memorial to the atrocities, and the suffering of the people.
The president of the memorial centre, Fabrice Escure, apologised for the offence caused by the vandalism and indicated that he wanted to file a complaint.
The memorial at Oradour sur Glane was defaced on Friday by activists/deniers. It has already been covered and I'm sure will be repaired soon. We must NEVER FORGET the atrocities of the past!
— WW2TV Paul Woodadge (@WW2TV)
French President Emmanuel Macron described it as an “unspeakable act”, while Prime Minister Jean Castex tweeted his anger.
“To defile this place of recollection is also to sully the memory of our martyrs,” he wrote.
“Everything possible is being done to ensure that the perpetrators of these infamous acts are brought to justice.”
Robert Hébras, the last survivor of the massacre of June 10, 1944, in which 642 men, women and children were slaughtered, said: "This is something that shocks me a lot. These people who do this and call us liars! I have lived the drama. I know very well who was in front of me, the soldiers of the Das Reich division on June 10, 1944!"