The operation was intended to
reshape the area of the
Old Port, a popular neighborhood whose small, curved and winding streets were considered dangerous by the German authorities. The Germans used for this an
urbanist plan prepared by French architects who supported the Vichy
ideology of "National Revolution" (''''). They decided to almost totally destroy the 1st arrondissement of Marseille. At Himmler's order, the population was evacuated to
concentration camps in the Northern Zone, in particular at
Compiègne. The Old Port itself was searched house by house by the German police, assisted by their French counterparts, and then the buildings were
dynamited. Mandated by the head of Vichy,
Pierre Laval, Bousquet demanded on 14 January 1943 that the operation be postponed for a week to improve its organization and have police reinforcements. Furthermore, while the Germans were focussed on the 1st arrondissement of Marseille, Bousquet spontaneously extended the operation to the entire city. According to historian
Maurice Rajsfus, he also requested complete freedom of action for the French police, which he obtained from SS
Karl Oberg. According to historian
Jacques Delarue, a witness to the operation, 200 police inspectors from Paris and elsewhere, 15
compagnies of the
Groupe mobile de réserve (GMR) and squads of French
gendarmes and mobile guards (
gardes mobiles) were brought to Marseille for the operation. In total, "approximatively 12,000 police men found themselves concentrated in Marseille.". On 22 January 1943 the Old Port was completely locked down. The city, except for the more wealthy, residential, neighborhoods, was searched house-by-house over a period of 36 hours. "In total, following tens of thousands of checks, nearly 2,000 Marseillese... found themselves in the death trains." wrote historian Maurice Rajsfus. In addition, 1,500 buildings were destroyed. The
Prefecture of the
Bouches-du-Rhône published a public statement on 24 January 1943: For reasons of military order and to guarantee the safety of the population, the German military authorities officially ordered the French administration to proceed immediately with the evacuation of the north end of the Old Port. For its part, the French administration decided on the grounds of internal security to carry out a vast police operation to rid Marseille of certain elements whose activities posed great risks to the population. The French administration worked hard to avoid mixing up the two operations. Sizeable police forces carried out numerous searches in the quarter. Entire neighbourhoods were surrounded and identity checks were made. More than 6,000 individuals were arrested and 40,000 identities were checked. The newspaper
Le Petit Marseillais of 30 January 1943 added: Let us be clear that the operations for the evacuation of the Old Port were carried out exclusively by the French police and that they did not give rise to any incidents. German newspapers also acclaimed the operation.
Walther Kiaulehn wrote in the German military newspaper
Signal: In the future, when we shall write the history of Marseilles, we will underline this remarkable feat that by having evacuated the old patrician neighborhood, which had been dishonored by the 20th century, the operation had used French and German policemen, as a group of engineers and physicians. A photo taken during this operation, and known since the beginning of the 1980s, shows head of French police René Bousquet posing with regional German police head of the SS, a high level officer of
Totenkopf, regional
prefect Marcel Lemoine, and
Pierre Barraud, delegate prefect of Marseille. While 30,000 were expelled from their neighborhood, people from the criminal underworld, such as
Paul Carbone, voluntarily surrendered at the beginning of the week, to be jailed while the "horrible show" took place. Several hundreds of Jews of Marseille, both
French and foreign, were first sent to
Fréjus, than to the
camp of Royallieu near Compiègne, and finally to
Drancy internment camp, from where they were sent to the extermination camps. In total, 2,000 Jews were put on the death trains. == See also ==