Drowning by Bullets
51m
Directed by Philip Brooks & Alan Hayling • Documentary • 1992 • 52 minutes
On the evening of October 17, 1961 about 30,000 Algerians, ostensibly French citizens, descended upon the boulevards of central Paris to protest an 8:30pm curfew, imposed by the French authorities in response to repeated terrorist attacks by Algerian nationalists in Paris and other French cities.
At that time France, led President Charles de Gaulle, was in trouble. The war in Algeria, marked by bloody atrocities committed by all sides, had been grinding on for nearly seven years. The country was constantly disrupted by strikes and protests by farmers and workers, as well as by terrorist acts. Thus, on October 17, Algerian demonstrators were met by a massive police force. Demonstrators were beaten, shot, even drowned in the Seine. Although no one seems to know for sure how many Algerians died that day, their number is estimated around 200.
DROWNING BY BULLETS exposes the massacre and the cover-up of what was undoubtedly one of the darkest nights in the history of France. Policemen, demonstrators, former officials, and journalists who witnessed the events speak on camera for the first time. These harrowing personal accounts are juxtaposed with clips from the French press, which supported the official lie that only a few people had died in the demonstration. DROWNING BY BULLETS reveals a story that quickly died, suppressed by the French goverment and a complicit press, and then drowned by the events that later shocked Europe.
"A chilling documentary, especially in view of the growing influence of the extreme Right in modern France." —Daily Mail