"Sécurité globale - Proposition de loi"
http://www.senat.fr/tableau-historique/ppl20-150.html
Article 24
I. â Le paragraphe 3 du chapitre IV de la loi du 29 juillet 1881 sur la libertĂ© de la presse est complĂ©tĂ© par un article 35 quinquies ainsi rĂ©digĂ© :
« Art. 35 quinquies. â Sans prĂ©judice du droit dâinformer, est puni dâun an dâemprisonnement et de 45 000 euros dâamende le fait de diffuser, par quelque moyen que ce soit et quel quâen soit le support, dans le but manifeste quâil soit portĂ© atteinte Ă son intĂ©gritĂ© physique ou psychique, lâimage du visage ou tout autre Ă©lĂ©ment dâidentification, autre que son numĂ©ro dâidentification individuel, dâun agent de la police nationale, dâun militaire de la gendarmerie nationale ou dâun agent de police municipale lorsque ces personnels agissent dans le cadre dâune opĂ©ration de police. »
Update 30 Nov:
The French government has decided to "totally rewrite" part of a new controversial security law that has sparked nationwide protests, amid a raging debate over police violence and accountability.
The move, interpreted as a climbdown, was announced by parliamentary leaders from the ruling majority dominated by President Emmanuel Macron's LREM (La République en Marche) movement.
The measure known as "Article 24", part of a âglobal securityâ law, would make it an offence to film and identify police officers online if there is intent to harm -- sparking fears that it might enable police to act with impunity.
The government will propose "a complete new rewrite" of the contested article, said the LREM's parliamentary leader Christophe Castaner at a news conference on Monday.
(https://www.euronews.com/2020/11/30/france-s-ruling-party-agrees-to-suspend-and-rewrite-controversial-article-24-security-meas)