Far Right: Neo-fascist activists from the “C9M” will finally be able to march in Paris on Saturday.

The "May 9 Committee," or "C9M," has finally been authorized to march on Saturday, April 10, in the 6th arrondissement of Paris, according to a press release from the Paris Administrative Court. Paris Prefect Laurent Nuñez issued a ban on Monday evening, citing the risk of public disorder and incitement to hatred.
The organizers filed an interim relief appeal with the Paris Administrative Court. The civil liberties judge suspended the ban on the rally, considering that the arguments raised by the prefecture "did not provide any specific indication of the radical ultra-nationalist activists who might be likely to join the demonstration."
A tribute to neo-fascist activist Sébastien DeyzieuThe "May 9 Committee" is a far-right group that annually pays tribute to neo-fascist activist Sébastien Deyzieu, who died in 1994 after falling from a rooftop he had climbed to escape police.
Last year , the procession, which brought together between 800 and 1,000 people, was allowed to march despite an initial ban being overturned in court. The images of the demonstration, sporting balaclavas, black flags, and Celtic crosses, shocked many political leaders.
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The interim relief judge, however, upheld on Friday the ban on an "anti-fascist and anti-racist demonstration" planned for Saturday in the capital, which was to include the Urgence Palestine collective. According to a statement from the administrative court, the interim relief judge ruled that the ban on the "anti-fascist and anti-racist" demonstration was "not manifestly illegal."
However, the "anti-fascist" gathering, organized in Place du Panthéon, was authorized
Le Républicain Lorrain