Unrest Spreads Around Paris

The resting place of threads that were very valid in 2004, but not so much in 2024. Basically this is a giant historical archive.


Post Reply
User avatar
Kollyvas
Protoposter
Posts: 1811
Joined: Mon 26 September 2005 5:02 pm
Location: Mesa, AZ
Contact:

Unrest Spreads Around Paris

Post by Kollyvas »

http://abcnews.go.com/International/wir ... SFeeds0312

ABC News
Rioting Spreads to 20 Towns Around ParisRioters Shoot at Police, Torch Car Dealerships, Buses in Eighth Day of Violence in Paris Suburbs
Firefighters inspect the ruins of a dealership garage in Aulnay-sous-Bois, east of Paris, Thursday, Nov. 3, 2005 after it was destroyed overnight by a raging fire, in the latest night of rioting in suburban Paris. A kindergarten, a gymnasium, government offices and hundreds of cars have been torched over the past week by youths in largely immigrant areas who began rampaging after two of their peers were electrocuted at a power substation while hiding from police they feared were chasing them. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)
By JAMEY KEATEN Associated Press Writer
The Associated Press

AULNAY-SOUS-BOIS, France Nov 3, 2005 — Rampaging youths shot at police and firefighters Thursday after burning car dealerships and public buses and hurling rocks at commuter trains, as eight days of riots over poor conditions in Paris-area housing projects spread to 20 towns.

Youths ignored an appeal for calm from President Jacques Chirac, whose government worked feverishly to fend off a political crisis amid criticism that it has ignored problems in neighborhoods heavily populated by first- and second-generation North African and Muslim immigrants.

Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin called a string of emergency meetings with Cabinet ministers throughout the day. He told the Senate the government "will not give in" to violence in the troubled suburbs.

French Rioters Shoot at Police, Fire Crews
Camilla Makes a Splash in Her U.S. Debut
Terrorists Escape

"Order and justice will be the final word in our country," Villepin said. "The return to calm and the restoration of public order are the priority our absolute priority."

The riots started last Thursday after the electrocution deaths of two teenagers who ran from a soccer game and hid in a power station in the northeastern suburb of Clichy-sous-Bois after they saw police enter the area. Youths in the neighborhood said police chased the boys to their death.

French authorities have said that officers were investigating a suspected burglary and not pursuing the boys, a view backed up by an interim report by the national police inspectors office released Thursday.

Investigators said the boys Mauritania-born Traore Bouna, 15, and Zyed Benna, 17, of Tunisia knew of the dangers of hiding in an electric substation as they sought to evade police. The report also cites two witnesses saying they did not see the boys being chased. A third boy, Muttin Altun, 17, was badly burned.

Separate administrative and judicial investigations into the accidental deaths also were under way.

By Wednesday night, violence triggered by the deaths had spread to at least 20 Paris-region towns, said Jean-Francois Cordet, the top government official for the Seine-Saint-Denis region north of Paris where the violence has been concentrated. He said youths in the region fired four shots at riot police and firefighters but caused no injuries.

(Page 2 of 3)

Nine people were injured in Seine-Saint-Denis and 315 cars burned across the Paris area, officials said. In the tough northeastern suburb of Aulnay-sous-Bois, youth gangs set fire to a Renault car dealership and burned at least a dozen cars, a supermarket and a local gymnasium.

Traffic was halted Thursday morning on a suburban commuter line linking Paris to Charles de Gaulle airport after stone-throwing rioters attacked two trains overnight at the Le Blanc-Mesnil station. They forced a conductor from one train and broke windows, the SNCF rail authority said. A passenger was lightly injured by broken glass.

French Rioters Shoot at Police, Fire Crews
Camilla Makes a Splash in Her U.S. Debut
Terrorists Escape

The unrest has highlighted the division between France's big cities and their poor suburbs, with frustration simmering in the housing projects in areas marked by high unemployment, crime and poverty.

The violence also cast doubt on the success of France's model of seeking to integrate its large immigrant community its Muslim population, at an estimated 5 million, is Western Europe's largest by playing down differences between ethnic groups. Rather than feeling embraced as full and equal citizens, immigrants and their French-born children complain of police harassment and of being refused jobs, housing and opportunities.

Opposition groups accused the government of letting the situation spiral out of control, either by failing to act quickly enough or letting in too many immigrants over the years.

"We see that the situation in certain neighborhoods is not getting better at all but degenerating," Socialist Party President Jean-Marc Ayrault told LCI television, who said Chirac's conservatives "did not know how to take control."

Right-wing French lawmaker Philippe de Villiers, who has said he wants to "stop the Islamization of France," told RTL radio that the problem stemmed from the "failure of a policy of massive and uncontrolled immigration."

Minister of Social Cohesion Jean-Louis Borloo said the government had to react "firmly" but added that France must also acknowledge its failure to have dealt with anger simmering in poor suburbs for decades.

"We cannot hide the truth: that for 30 years we have not done enough," he told France-2 television.

French Rioters Shoot at Police, Fire Crews
Camilla Makes a Splash in Her U.S. Debut
Terrorists Escape

Associated Press Writer Cecile Brisson contributed to this report from Bobigny, France.

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

User avatar
Kollyvas
Protoposter
Posts: 1811
Joined: Mon 26 September 2005 5:02 pm
Location: Mesa, AZ
Contact:

Ethnic Minorities Perpetrate Massive Pogroms In Paris

Post by Kollyvas »

http://english.pravda.ru/accidents/21/9 ... Paris.html

Ethnic minorities organize massive pogroms in France
11/03/2005 11:38
The growing amount of the non-white population has given rise to many problems in France

Massive disorders in several suburbs of Paris populated with natives of North Africa have been going on for several days already. Violence started when residents of Arab quarters accused policemen of the death of two teenagers that were trying to run away from law-enforcement officers. The situation demonstrates the complexity of relations between the native French population and immigrants from former colonies, the number of which has been growing in France during the recent several years.

The history of such conflicts started in the 19th century, when France seized vast territories in Africa and Asia and turned them into its colonies. A lot of Algerians, Moroccans, Senegalese and residents of other colonies took an active part in the battles conducted by the French Army. Many of those people became full-fledged French citizens afterwards, in the 1920s. In addition, some colonial citizens were given a right to work in French cities, although they were not allowed to take their family members along.

Practically all colonies obtained independence after the end of WWII. Algeria became a sovereign state in 1962, eight years after the war. Nevertheless, the inflow of immigrants from colonies to France was growing anyway: it was partly caused with the demographic crisis, which started in the country and the lack of labour force, which became the direct consequence of the crisis. The law about the family reunification was passed in France in 1976: millions of relatives of those already residing in France decided to leave their homes and move to France.

Click here to see the phororeport of what is going on in Paris

The national structure of immigrants is rather diverse: there are Vietnamese people, as well as Muslim and Christian Africans, etc. However, Arabs from Algeria, Morocco and Tunis made the largest colony: they only had to cross the Mediterranean Sea to reach France. It is hard to calculate the precise number of immigrants from the former French colonies, because the law prohibited nationality and religion-related questions during the population census. According to various estimates, there are up to ten million Arabs living in present-day France.

The growing amount of the non-white population has given rise to many problems. Immigrant communities took whole areas of Paris, Lyons, Marseilles and other large cities of the country. The quarters populated by immigrants were gradually turning into closed ghettos, where local traditions were replacing French laws: hijab kerchiefs, for example, that Muslim women wear on their heads have become the usual part of the French reality. The majority of newcomers can not find jobs and thus contribute to the increasing level of criminality. Hooliganism, racketeering, rapes and drug sales prosper in the French ghettos. Immigrants commit the largest number of crimes in France's largest cities, the police say.

Unlike Christian blacks, Arabs spend a lot of their time in mosques, whereas local authorities do not have any means to control what is going on there in the mosques. It is not ruled out that one may hear calls to Jihad and donations to organize terrorist acts all over the world, including France itself. The largest act of terrorism occurred in Paris in 1995, when a blast in the Parisian underground killed nine and injured dozens.

The reaction of the French society to ongoing aggression of the Arab population has won popularity to the far-right National Front with Jean Mari Le Pen at the head. His slogans about the need to deport millions of immigrants and deny the French entry to Muslims attract about ten percent of French voters. In 2002, for example, Le Pen managed to enter the second stage of the presidential election in France.

The French government started taking measures in connection with the continuing violence on the outskirts of Paris. Visa rules were introduced for citizens of Algeria, Morocco and Tunis, several mosques were closed and hundreds of Islamists were arrested. Another radical law appeared in France in the spring of the current year, when French law-makers prohibited Muslim women from wearing expressive religious symbols at schools, hijabs first and foremost. The new rule triggered massive actions of protest among Muslims not only in France, but in all Muslim countries. Many Islamic fundamentalists declared Jihad on France, but the French government has not changed its decision yet.

Ivan Shmelev

Read the original in Russian: http://www.pravda.ru/world/02-11-2005/66102-France-0 (Translated by: Dmitry Sudakov)

Pravda.Ru

Related links:
PRAVDA.Ru Castro and Chavez light a fire of revolutions in Latin America against USA
PRAVDA.Ru Pogroms are no problem for NATO
PRAVDA.Ru Stalin
PRAVDA.Ru Stalin, Part two
PRAVDA.Ru Only Allah Knows Why

Printing version E-mail this article Add to Favorites

Post Reply