Nathalie Ménigon

Nathalie Ménigon was born 28 February 1957 in Enghien-les-Bains (Val-d'Oise). She was convicted for acts of terrorism committed while she was a member of the French revolutionary group Action directe. She was sentenced to life in prison in 1989 and freed in August 2008 after serving more than 20 years in prison.

Founding member of Action directe

Born into a working-class family, she founded Action directe in 1978 with Jean-Marc Rouillan. She was arrested in September 1980 after a gunfight with police. She was freed in 1981 by a presidential amnesty issued by François Mitterrand but remained charged with attempted murder of police officers. After she was released, she secretly re-joined with other members of Action directe.

Arrest and imprisonment

She was arrested, with her companions Jean-Marc Rouillan, Joëlle Aubron and Georges Cipriani, on 18 February 1987 on a farm in Vitry-aux-Loges. She was convicted in 1989 for the 1986 assassination of Georges Besse, then-President of Renault, and of the 1985 assassination of René Audran, a senior official at the French French Ministry of Defence. She was sentenced to life in prison.[1]

She married Jean-Marc Rouillan on 29 June 1999 at the Fleury-Mérogis Prison.[2]

Release from prison

She was imprisoned in the Bapaume Prison, located in Pas-de-Calais, until August 2007. She was three times denied a suspended sentence for medical reasons, after suffering from hemiplegia, depression, problems balancing, and spasms. In May 2007 she was transferred to a house arrest program.[3] The conditions allowed her to work during the days, but she had to spend her nights in prison.[1] This parole was required in order for her to eventually be conditionally released from prison. Her conditional release was effective 2 August 2008.[4]

While in prison she suffered from hemiplegia, caused by two strokes. She also engaged in self-harm in 2003, in protest of the jail conditions.[5]

Communist Combatant Cells

Nathalie Ménigon had contacts with Pierre Carettee, the founder of the Belgian group Communist Combatant Cells.

New Anticapitalist Party

In July 2008, she expressed interest in New Anticapitalist Party, started by Olivier Besancenot and the Revolutionary Communist League.[6]

Notes

  1. 1 2 "Nathalie Ménigon obtient une semi-liberté, appel du parquet",L'Express, 10 May 2007 (source Reuters).
  2. http://www.lefigaro.fr/actualite-france/2008/07/17/01016-20080717ARTFIG00393-les-retrouvailles-de-nathalie-menigon-et-jean-marc-rouillan-.php Nathalie Ménigon en liberté conditionnelle, Le Figaro, 17 July 2008
  3. Nathalie Ménigon obtient une semi-liberté libération.fr (19/07/2007)
  4. "L'ex-militante d'Action directe Nathalie Ménigon est sortie de prison "", Le Monde, 2 August 2008.
  5. L'ex-militante d'Action directe Nathalie Ménigon sort de prison, Le Point, 2 August 2008
  6. Le Point - n°1868 - 3 July 2008
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.