ON a chilly night in February, a teenager lies in a pool of blood after being beaten to death by 30 thugs in a high-rise ghetto.
The “score settling” lynching was the start of a blood-soaked turf war still raging through the southern French city of Marseille – just a short car ride away from millionaires’ playgrounds like Saint-Tropez and Cannes.
Fuelled by an intense rivalry between two notorious gangs, DZ Mafia and Yoda, vulnerable teenager footsoliders – dubbed ‘Kleenex killers’ due to their ‘disposability’ – have turned parts of the picturesque city into a warzone.
Local cops have counted 68 shootings since the start of the year, 30 of which were fatal. Just this month, there were six deaths in six days.
As the frightening figures threaten to tip last year’s death toll already, residents in the impacted areas are fearing for their lives, with Marseille state prosecutor Dominique Laurens admitting: “It’s a bloodbath.”