"Punjabi men are inventive. The region has been at the forefront of fusion, it believes in hybridity. This is especially the case with the Punjabi diaspora - even when they live in ghettos, they are the showmen [of their lives]," says art historian, author and museum curator Alka Pande.
"We will not tolerate any abuse today and the fans who want to enjoy the parade, can do so safely."He added that "PSG supporters shouldn't be mixed up with gangs of looters and vandals".
Separately, the Paris Prosecutor's Office told the BBC "several shops were looted" in the Place des Ternes area. About 30 people were arrested and taken into custody near a Foot Locker on the Champs-Elysées that was robbed, the office said.Elsewhere across France, Dax mayor Julien Dubois, reacting to the fatal stabbing, said his "thoughts are with the young victim, his family and friends"."We are floored by all the drama tonight," he wrote on social media. "It is advisable to quickly shed light on these facts in order to severely punish the perpetrator."
While clashes broke out near the city's Champs-Élysées avenue and PSG's Parc des Princes stadium, the majority of fans celebrated PSG's 5-0 win over Inter Milan peacefully, with many singing and dancing in the streets or blaring their car horns.The Eiffel Tower was illuminated with PSG's blue and red colours.
French President Emmanuel Macron, a keen supporter of rivals Olympique de Marseille, posted on X: "A glorious day for PSG! Bravo, we are all proud. Paris, the capital of Europe this evening."
Approximately 5,400 police were deployed across Paris in anticipation of the raucous celebrations.During Yoon's term, she says, government departments or publicly-funded organisations with the word "women" in their title largely disappeared or dropped the reference altogether.
The impact has been polarising. It alienated young women who saw this as a rollback of hard-won rights, even as it fuelled the backlash against feminism.Byunghui saw this up-close back home in Daegu. She says anti-Yoon protests were overwhelmingly female. The few men who came were usually older.
Young men, she adds, even secondary school students, would often drive past the protests she attended cursing and swearing at them. She says some men even threatened to drive into the crowd."I wondered if they would have acted this way had the protest been led by young men?"