[Mb-civic] France Beefs Up Response to Riots - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Tue Nov 8 03:45:57 PST 2005
France Beefs Up Response to Riots
Plan Includes Curfews, More Police Officers
By Molly Moore
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, November 8, 2005; Page A01
PARIS, Nov. 7 -- In a television address to the nation Monday night,
France's prime minister, Dominique de Villepin, announced his
government's new plan to curb riots that have spread to 300 French towns
and cities in the last 12 days: 1,500 additional police officers on the
streets, local curfews, parental intervention and more educational
opportunities for students in affected suburbs.
Even as Villepin spoke, another night of violence broke out, as young
men in the southern city of Toulouse set fire to a city bus and threw
rocks at police officers. In the Paris suburbs, where the unrest began,
rioters set fire to a junior high school and a hospital.
Confronted by the most dramatic social uprising since 1968, the
government of France remains largely helpless against gangs of angry
youths. The response is being crafted by a lame-duck president and an
interior minister and a prime minister who are slugging it out to
replace him.
While many French leaders depict the rioters as simple criminals,
political and social analysts and many French citizens see the fires
that are burning across the country as reflecting a growing identity
crisis in a nation where social policies have not kept up with rapidly
changing profiles in religion, race and ethnicity.
"France is in a social and economic crisis," said Michelle Rosso, a
43-year-old music teacher from the town of Bagnolet in the northern
suburbs of Paris, where the unrest has been most intense. "It's similar
to the U.S. civil rights movement in the '60s. The integration policies
of this country clearly do not work."
Most of the rioters are the French-born children of immigrants from Arab
and African countries. A large percentage are Muslim. Their parents'
generation was invited to France as laborers who were expected to return
home but didn't. The new generation is coming of age in the midst of
France's worst economic slump in years and during a time when many in
the country, which is culturally Christian but officially secular, are
increasingly fearful of the growth of Islam inside its borders.
At present, the country has an estimated 6 million Muslims, most of
African descent. The fear of losing France's traditional white European
identity fueled French voters' rejection of the proposed European Union
constitution last summer and has heightened French opposition to
admitting Muslim Turkey into the E.U.
"The government hasn't really realized we're facing a major political
crisis," said Patrick Lozes, a political activist and president of the
Circle for the Promotion of Diversity in France. "The French social
model is exploding."
In a country that has prided itself on its egalitarian social system,
Lozes said, "black people and Arab people are not really considered to
be from this country. They are considered an inferior group."
"People are shouting they want to be equal," said Christophe Bertossi,
an immigration specialist at the French Institute for International
Relations. "And the government is treating them as if they were
criminals or terrorists."
Sunday night and Monday morning brought a new peak of violence, with an
estimated 1,400 vehicles torched in Paris and other French cities.
Several cars were burned in Brussels, where the E.U. is headquartered,
and half a dozen in Berlin, raising concerns in other European capitals
that the violence is spreading to their territory.
On Monday, a 61-year-old man died of injuries sustained last week when
he was attacked while trying to extinguish a fire in trash bin. He was
the first fatality since two Muslim teenagers were electrocuted in a
power substation while trying to evade a police checkpoint on Oct. 27.
That incident touched off the rioting.
(continued)...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/07/AR2005110700295.html?referrer=email
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.islandlists.com/pipermail/mb-civic/attachments/20051108/dc805042/attachment.htm
More information about the Mb-civic
mailing list