User:Y2re6z7/David Thomson (journaliste)

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David Thomson (born April 23, 1980) is a Franco-British journalist, who is currently senior international correspondent for Radio France Internationale and spent years building contacts within jihadi circles and covering the rise of islamic terrorism in France. He is the author of the best-selling book The Returned: They Left to Wage Jihad, Now They're Back[1] and was labeled France hottest intellectual by Foreign Policy in 2017[2].

Biography

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Early Life

Thomson was born in France in 1980 to a British father and French mother. He grew up in the outskirts of Paris in a middle-class catholic family[3]. He holds a master degree in broadcast journalism from the Journalism School of Bordeaux Aquitaine Institut de journalisme Bordeaux Aquitaine[4] and a master degree of political science from the Institute of Political Studies of Aix en Provence (Sciences Po Aix) with his thesis dedicated to the heritage of Jacques Foccart.

Career

Thomson began his career in Paris in 2008, working in radio for Radio France, Radio France Internationale and RMC, in television for France Television, France 24 and M6 and for the newspapers Libération and 20Minutes.

In 2010[5], Radio France Internationale appointed him as their Tunis-based correspondent during the Tunisian revolution of 2010-2011. He also worked as a foreign correspondent for Radio France and France 24. Thomson covered the 2012 attack of the U.S. Embassy in Tunisia when hundreds of protesters ransacked the embassy in their fury over a film denigrating the Prophet Mohammad. He sustained serious buckshot injuries to the legs while filming in Siliana in 2012[6]. He directed the documentary Tunisia : The Jihad Temptation about the Tunisian jihadi movement Ansar al Charia for ARTE Television in 2013[7] and he was awarded the Ilaria-Alpi prize for Best international TV Reportage.[8].

In 2011, Thomson reported from the front line on the war in Libya[9], both with the armed rebel forces and with the Kadhafi regime. He also covered the political transitions in Tunisia[10], in Egypt and in Mali.


ISIS reporting

In 2014, after a year of extensive investigation[11], the only one on this subject at the beginning of 2016[12], Thomson gathered around twenty direct testimonies from French jihadists who had gone to fight in Syria and told their story in the book Les Français jihadistes (The French jihadis)[13] (L'Express-BFM TV Prize 2014[14]). This book is the first published on the phenomenon of jihadism in the Iraqi-Syrian zone and the Islamic State. Two years after its publication, it is still considered "the work of reference" by the newspaper Le Monde[15], to understand jihadi mechanics. According to the France Télévisions news site, "David Thomson has quickly become a reference, through his knowledge of jihadist networks thanks to his presence in the field and on social networks"[16]. In this book, he is the first to alert on the terrorist risk represented by the French jihadis who left for Syria for France. He is mocked and discredited for this during a prime-time television show[17] in 2014. Three years later, he denounces a denial in France and Tunisia[18] on jihadist issues[19]. Vanity Fair magazine compared him to "a Galileo obstinate in repeating what we did not want to hear about jihadists"[20].

The information on the French jihadist milieu that he disseminates daily on his Twitter account[21] followed by more than 150,000 subscribers[22] is regularly repeated and chronicled in the media[23],[24]. This account is among the best informed about ISIS-claimed attacks[25]. In 2016, his Facebook account was suspended by mistake, a suspension denounced by the association Reporters Without Borders[26],[27].

Faced with what he calls "jihadoscepticism"[28], Thomson expressed his fear of jihadist attacks in France as early as 2014. In April 2014, he is a guest of Frédéric Taddeï on the show Ce soir (ou jamais !)[29] where he is strongly contradicted by the other guests and in particular by the sociologist Raphaël Liogier after having declared that "for jihadis, France is the enemy of Islam and Allah. In their minds, hitting France is legitimate."[30] In December 2016, upon the release of his second book, he recalled: "It's obvious today but it was unspeakable at the time. What blindness, when I think of it!" Asked in August 2015 about the possible infiltration of migrant flows from Libya by terrorists, he tweeted that "From #Libya, no migrant boat has yet left an area held by #ISIS",[31],[32], adding however that "such an option is also not entirely excluded."

On this subject, David Thomson works only from a network of sources on the ground, including jihadis, and refuses to collaborate with the intelligence, police or justice services, a position which sometimes earns him critics, but one the journalist owns[33], arguing that "the only way to understand how one becomes a jihadi is to ask them the question"[34]. After the Brussels attacks[35] in March 2016, he denounces a "circular circulation of non-expertise" in the media and its influence on public debate and political decision-making in the field of terrorism, citing " retired police officers sometimes disconnected from the reality of the files" of the moment, or agents briefly assigned in departments where they were not always in charge of jihadi issues.[36]

At the end of 2016, after five years of work on jihadism from primary sources[37], more than two years of interviews[38],[39] with French men and women[40] returning from Syria and Iraq[41], he released the book[42] Les Revenants[43] (The Returned: They Left to Wage Jihad, Now They're Back)[44] which became a best-seller[45] in a few days and which earned him to be described in the press as "an anthropologist journalist"[46]. "A rare immersion in the world of French jihadi" according to the newspaper Le Monde[47], "an exceptional document which plunges the reader into the heads of the French soldiers of Daesh" according to Le Figaro[48]. On December 12, 2016, he received the Grand Prix de la presse internationale[49] Challenging the effectiveness of de-radicalization centers, he says, “It all comes down to two things: counseling and the ability to find a job. We do not reintegrate by marginalizing. But who wants to risk using them? You cannot de-radicalize in a prison. »

Victim of death threats, he is placed in police protection by the Service de la protection de la police nationale (SDLP) in 2016[50],[51]. He then decides a year later to move to the United States[50],[51]. After five years working exclusively on jihadism, he wants to change his journalistic focus: "When you are immersed in it, it becomes your normality. I have been bathing in it from night to morning for years: it's still crazy, but at the same time it's my reality. That's also why I have to stop! »


Awards

In 2017, Thomson is awarded the Albert-Londres prize, the highest French journalistic distinction, for his book Les Revenants[52]/The Returned and he confirms his wish to stop working on the subject and become a United States correspondent for RFI[53].

In January 2018, Thomson co-signs a column denouncing the pressure exerted by Vincent Bolloré and Vivendi on the media investigating their activities in Africa[54].

On December 8, 2018, the La plume et l'épée prize is awarded to him for his book Les Revenants[55]/The Returned.

The term "The Returned", inspired by the title of his book devoted to jihadis returning to France, gradually gained ground in public debate to such an extent that it ended up appearing in the dictionaries of Robert illustré and Petit Robert[56].

Court

David Thomson is sued for defamation by Christian Estrosi, for having quoted in his book Les Revenants/The Returned a repentant jihadi declaring: "I blame the mayor of Nice because he was aware of all this, he let it happen", in reference to the activities of Omar Omsen, the main jihadist recruiter in the city of Nice. He is acquitted on February 7, 2019 by the Nice Criminal Court[57]. In December 2020, the Court of Appeal again overturns the conviction of the RFI journalist, making this decision final[58].

Publications

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  • 2014 : Les Français jihadistes, Paris, Les Arènes, 227 p. ISBN 978-2-35204-327-0
  • 2016 : Les Français jihadistes, 2e édition, Paris, Les Arènes, 300 p. ISBN 978-2352044758
  • 2016 : Les Revenants, Paris, Le Seuil - collection « Les Jours », 294 p. ISBN 978-2-02134-939-9. Grand prix de la presse internationale 2016[59]
  • 2018: The Returned: They Left to Wage Jihad, Now They're Back, Polity 1st edition, 240 p. ISBN 978-1509526918

Television

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  • Tunisia : the jihad temptation, documentary directed by David Thomson, Gwenlaouen Le Gouil, Hamdi Tlili and Nicolas Baudry d'Asson.

Notes et références

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[[Category:French journalists]] [[Category:21st-century French journalists]] [[Category:Sciences Po Aix alumni]] [[Category:1980 births]] [[Category:Radio France people]]

  1. ^ David, Thomson. "The Returned: They Left to Wage Jihad, Now They're Back".
  2. ^ Symons, Emma-Kate. "How France's Fight With Islam Became a Bestseller". Foreign Policy.
  3. ^ Werly, Richard (15 December 2016). "David Thomson, l'homme qui parlait aux djihadistes". letemps.ch. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  4. ^ Doucet, David (2016-12-06). "Les Inrocks - Portrait de David Thomson, l'homme qui parlait aux jihadistes". Les Inrocks. Retrieved 2016-12-14.
  5. ^ Werly, Richard (15 December 2016). "David Thomson, l'homme qui parlait aux djihadistes". letemps.ch. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  6. ^ Priscille Lafitte (4 December 2012). "Blessé à Siliana, David Thomson témoigne : "la police a tiré aveuglément"". France24.com..
  7. ^ Romain Caillet (25 March 2014). ""Les Français jihadistes": L'envers du décor contre les clichés". huffingtonpost.fr..
  8. ^ "Premio Ilaria Alpi 2013: i vincitori della XIX edizione". ilariaalpi.it. 7 September 2013..
  9. ^ "La bataille de Tripoli n'est pas encore gagnée". France Inter 23/08/2011.
  10. ^ "Grand Reportage Tunisie : deux ans après la chute de Ben Ali, la crise sociale perdure". RFI 14/01/2013.
  11. ^ "Djihadisme: nos petits soldats d'Allah". L'Express 05/03/2014.
  12. ^ Pierre-Henri Ortiz (Nonfiction) (24 March 2016). "«Même lorsqu'ils tuent, les djihadistes sont convaincus de faire le bien»". slate.fr..
  13. ^ Sarah Ben Hamadi (11 March 2014). ""Les Français djihadistes", interview de David Thomson". huffingtonpost.fr..
  14. ^ Marie-Christine Imbault (24 June 2014). "Les lecteurs de L'Express/BFM TV couronnent Maylis de Kerangal". livreshebdo.fr..
  15. ^ Jean Birnbaum (03-03-2016). "Prière d'insérer. La religion de l'immédiat". Le Monde.fr. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help).
  16. ^ Clément Parrot (2016-04-04). "Qui sont les "experts en terrorisme" qui squattent les médias après un attentat ?". francetvinfo.fr..
  17. ^ "Le jour où David Thomson a été "humilié" sur France 2". 7/7 06/12/16.
  18. ^ "Le "déni tunisien" face à la menace djihadiste explique leur nombre en Syrie affirme le journaliste français David Thomson". HuffPost Tunisie 20/12/2016.
  19. ^ "David Thomson: «L'Europe est condamnée à subir le contre-choc des erreurs qui ont été faites»". SLATE. 20.12.2016. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  20. ^ Fair, Vanity (2017-02-22). "David Thomson raconte sa vie avec les djihadistes de l'État islamique". Vanity Fair (in French). Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  21. ^ "Revendication : David Thomson scrute Twitter et Telegram".
  22. ^ 28 minutes - ARTE (2016-12-05). "David Thomson - 28 minutes - ARTE". Retrieved 2016-12-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  23. ^ Daniel Schneidermann (15 March 2015). "L'enfant bourreau, qui nous regarde en face". Libération.fr..
  24. ^ Daniel Schneidermann (15 March 2015). "L'enfant bourreau, qui nous regarde en face". Libération.fr..
  25. ^ "L'Euro-2016 sera "un cimetière", a menacé Abballa dans une vidéo sur Facebook AFP". AFP 14/06/2016. 14 June 2016. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  26. ^ Andrea Fradin (21 June 2016). "Sur Facebook, le journaliste David Thomson « au piquet » pendant trois jours". Rue89. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  27. ^ Andrea Fradin (21 June 2016). "Sur Facebook, le journaliste David Thomson « au piquet » pendant trois jours". Rue89. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  28. ^ David Thomson 2016.
  29. ^ "David Thomson taclé sur le plateau de Frédéric Taddei - vidéo Dailymotion". Dailymotion. 2016-06-14. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  30. ^ Michaël Bouche (6 December 2016). "Le jour où David Thomson a été "humilié" sur France 2". 7sur7.be. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  31. ^ "Non, Daech n'utilise pas les flux de migrants pour s'infiltrer en Europe". liberation.fr. 11 August 2015. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  32. ^ "NON, LES TERRORISTES DE DAECH NE S'INFILTRENT PAS PARMI LES MIGRANTS". lci.fr. 11 August 2015. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  33. ^ Romain Mielcarek (26 January 2016). "Enquêteurs ou observateurs : ce qu'ils cherchent dans la tête des djihadistes". itele.fr..
  34. ^ "David Thomson "La seule façon de comprendre comment on devient djihadiste, c'est de poser la question"". Matinale de France Inter L'INVITÉ DE 8H20 01/12/16.
  35. ^ "Attaqué en diffamation par Christian Estrosi, un journaliste spécialiste du djihad obtient la relaxe". Nice-Matin (in French). 2019-02-07. Retrieved 2019-02-08.
  36. ^ Dejean, Mathieu (2016-03-25). "Comment les faux experts du jihadisme influencent le débat public". lesinrocks.com..
  37. ^ "Les Revenants" : un livre sur la réalité des djihadistes français. David Thomson est l'invité de France 2. Il est le seul journaliste français qui parle et côtoie les djihadistes. Il vient de publier un livre intitulé "Les Revenants". Un document qui nous plonge dans la tête des soldats français de l'État islamique". France 2 / France Télévisions. 08/12/2016. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  38. ^ "Etat islamique : «Même déçus, ils conservent des convictions jihadistes»". Libération.fr. Retrieved 2016-12-21.
  39. ^ "Ces jihadistes qui reviennent en France". Quotidien / TMC.
  40. ^ "Paris/Rakka, aller-retour : parcours de radicalisation. Guillaume Erner reçoit David Thomson". France Culture 06.12.2016.
  41. ^ "« Les Revenants » : pour comprendre les djihadistes français". The Conversation 19/12/2016.
  42. ^ ""Les Revenants" : un livre sur la réalité des djihadistes français". Franceinfo (in French). 2016-12-08. Retrieved 2016-12-21.
  43. ^ "Ces jihadistes qui reviennent en France". tmc (in French). 2016-12-01. Retrieved 2016-12-21.
  44. ^ David, Thomson. "The Returned: They Left to Wage Jihad, Now They're Back".
  45. ^ Devecchio, Alexandre (2016-12-12). "Les Revenants: l'essai sur le djihad qui réconcilie Roy et Kepel". Le Figaro (in French). ISSN 0182-5852. Retrieved 2016-12-21.
  46. ^ Clément Pétreault (9 December 2016). "David Thomson : "Les programmes de déradicalisation sont une tartufferie"". lepoint.fr.
  47. ^ "Paroles brutes de djihadistes français". Le Monde.fr (in French). 2016-11-30. ISSN 1950-6244. Retrieved 2016-12-21.
  48. ^ Devecchio, Alexandre (2016-12-01). "David Thomson: «Les djihadistes qui reviennent ne sont pas repentis»". Le Figaro (in French). ISSN 0182-5852. Retrieved 2016-12-21.
  49. ^ "RFI : David Thomson Grand Prix de la presse Internationale". lettreaudiovisuel.com. 12 December 2016. Retrieved 20 December 2016.
  50. ^ a b Alexandre Devecchio, David Thomson : «Il est impossible de s'assurer de la sincérité du repentir d'un djihadiste», Le Figaro, 25 janvier 2018.
  51. ^ a b Le journaliste David Thomson explique avoir dû quitter la France après "des menaces de mort", L'Obs, 25 janvier 2018.
  52. ^ Yann Castanier (4 July 2017). "David Thomson prix Albert-Londres pour « Les revenants »". Les jours (in French). Retrieved 4 July 2017. {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |numéro= (help); no-break space character in |title= at position 41 (help).
  53. ^ Mathieu Delahousse (2017-07-04). "David Thomson : "J'arrête de travailler sur le djihadisme"". Teleobs. Retrieved 2017-07-05.
  54. ^ Anne Demoulin, Une vingtaine de médias et des journalistes dénoncent les pressions de Vincent Bolloré, 20 Minutes, 24 janvier 2018.
  55. ^ Com (2018-12-12). "Lauréats 2018". La Plume et L'Epée (in French). Retrieved 2019-02-08.
  56. ^ "Les nouveaux mots du dico 2019 sont…". leparisien.fr (in French). 2018-05-13CEST19:10:24+02:00. Retrieved 2018-05-23. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  57. ^ "Attaqué en diffamation par Christian Estrosi, un journaliste spécialiste du djihad obtient la relaxe". Nice-Matin (in French). 2019-02-07. Retrieved 2019-02-08.
  58. ^ Christian Estrosi définitivement débouté de ses poursuites en diffamation contre un journaliste, laprovence.com, 1er décembre 2020
  59. ^ "Les Revenants". seuil.com. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
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