Pierre Overney (French pronunciation: [pjɛʁ ɔvɛʁnɛ]; 1948 – 25 February 1972) was a French worker and Maoist political activist. He was killed by a security guard.
Death
editPierre Overney was a worker in the Renault automobile factory. He was fired from his job. On Friday, 25 February 1972, Overney and other activists were distributing pamphlets to the workers as they entered and left the gates. Pierre got into a dispute with security guard Jean-Antoine Tramoni. The guard pulled a gun and shot Overney.
Reactions
editArmed actions
editOn 1 March 1972, in response to the murder, a group of activists set fire to the cars in the Renault depot.
On 8 March 1972, the Maoist organization Nouvelle résistance populaire kidnapped Robert Nogrette.[1]
Funeral
edit200,000 attended Overney's funeral,[2] including Jean-Paul Sartre and Michel Foucault.
Trial of Tramoni and action of the NAPAP
editTramoni's trial began in January 1973. The court sentenced him to four years in prison. Following his release from prison on 23 March 1977, Tramoni was killed by the Maoist group Armed Nuclei for Popular Autonomy[3][4]
Commemoration in culture
editFrench singer Dominique Grange dedicated a song named Pierrot est tombé to Pierre Overney.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Paris Normandie, édition Calvados, 3 March 1972.
- ^ 40 ans après, Pierre Overney
- ^ Artus, Hubert, "Les fantômes de la Gauche Prolétarienne revisités" Rue89, 30 March 2008.
- ^ Anne Argouse and Hugues Peyret, Mort pour la cause du peuple, 52 minutes, FR3 Haute-Normandie, 17 October 2013.