Murder of Lyhanna, 11, enrages France and turns up heat on government
The murder of 11-year-old Lyhanna in southwestern France has sparked nationwide protests and intensified pressure on the French government. The suspect, Jérome Barella, had been reported to police last August for alleged sexual abuse of another child, with medical evidence confirming the abuse.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedThe murder of 11-year-old Lyhanna in southwestern France has sparked nationwide protests and intensified pressure on the French government. The suspect, Jérome Barella, had been reported to police last August for alleged sexual abuse of another child, with medical evidence confirming the abuse. Despite the complaint, Barella was not questioned by investigators for nine months. Lyhanna's body was discovered last Thursday, six days after she was last seen. Barella, the father of a friend of Lyhanna, was arrested and has denied involvement in her death, though he admitted driving her to a swimming pool. Protesters are demanding accountability from the government, with many calling for the resignation of Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin.
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5 extractedLyhanna's body was found last Thursday at a farm around 10km from Fleurance, where she was last seen six days previously.
Medical evidence confirmed Rosa had been abused, and yet not once in the nine months since the complaint was filed was Barella questioned by investigators.
The suspect, Jérome Barella, had been reported to police last August by the mother of a 10-year-old called Rosa, who alleged he had sexually abused her daughter.
France's government is under mounting pressure over the murder of an 11-year-old girl whose alleged killer had several times been denounced to police as a sex offender.
More than 60,000 people took part in protests across the country on Monday following the killing of Lyhanna.