A small town in northern France has laid to rest a 10-year-old boy, killed in his own home, as anger grows over missed warnings that could have prevented the tragedy. The funeral of Lucas M., held under grey skies in the commune of Lens, drew hundreds of mourners who lined the streets in silence.
Many held white roses, the symbol of a childhood stolen. Inside the church, the boy’s mother, a factory worker, wept as the priest spoke of a life cut short. Outside, the questions that refuse to fade: why did the police fail to act when neighbours reported screams from the family flat multiple times in the weeks before the killing?
The suspect, the mother’s partner, had a history of domestic violence and was known to local social services. Yet the calls for help went unanswered. This is not just a tragedy of one family.
It is a story of a system that failed to protect the most vulnerable. In Lens, a town hit hard by the decline of coal mining and steel, jobs are scarce and public services are stretched. The police force, like many in France’s post-industrial north, is underfunded and overworked.
But for the families here, that is no excuse. The mayor has called for a national inquiry. The boy’s mother, now homeless and displaced from the flat where her son died, spoke only briefly: “He trusted me.
I trusted them. We all failed.” Her words echo the sentiment of a community that feels abandoned by the state.
As the coffin was lowered into the ground, the sound of shovels on earth was the only reply.









