The promise is solemn.
Traveling to Le Havre (Seine-Maritime) at the beginning of March alongside former Prime Minister Édouard Philippe, Minister Thomas Cazenave proclaims his ambition to “guarantee the security of the largest port in France” in the face of drug trafficking.
A few hundred meters away, in a pavilion overlooking the thousands of containers in the port, Pierre, Danièle and Alexia know only too well the devastation caused by drugs on the Le Havre docks, where 2.7 tonnes of cocaine were seized again on March 18.
The mafia drift which is corrupting the main gateway for coke into France cost them a son, a brother: Allan Affagard, 40 years old, kidnapped and killed on June 12, 2020. A crime which traumatized the dockers' corporation, revealed the establishment in the port of Le Havre of criminal organizations ready for anything… but which has never been resolved.
Four years after the death of Allan Affagard, his loved ones spoke for the first time.
In the hope that justice will not be satisfied with the minimum trial to which they have been entitled until now.
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