![]() 200 held in Paris violence
Paris - Arson attacks flared around Paris and in other parts of France early on Saturday with more than 750 vehicles torched and over 200 arrests as the worst violence seen in decades dragged on into its ninth straight night.
Incidents on a smaller scale were reported in the southern cities of Toulouse and Nice, and in the northern cities of Lille and Rennes. The police arrested far more "troublemakers" than the 78 they had picked up the previous night, in line with priorities laid down for them by hardline Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy. The intensity of violence was lower than in previous nights, however, as the youths from low-income, high-immigration neighbourhoods behind the unrest mostly avoided clashes with police, preferring to run away after setting the fires. Only in a few cases were bottles, stones and Molotov cocktails thrown at officers and firemen responding to the blazes, in contrast with previous nights. The new round of rampages came just hours after Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin held a crisis meeting late on Friday with Sarkozy on the riots, which were the worst since a 1968 student revolt. Sarkozy later made a surprise visit to a police command centre west of Paris, telling officers: "Arrests - that's the key." He urged them to get more information on those causing the trouble "so we can better understand how they're organised, because they are organised." For the first time since the violence began, a police helicopter flew over the worst-affected districts. Much of the blame for the prolonged fury in the streets has been aimed at Sarkozy and his hardline policies designed to clean up the crime-ridden suburbs. He has referred to the trouble-makers as "rabble" and vowed to clean their neighbourhoods "with a power-hose." The Muslim youths waging the violence have responded in interviews by demanding Sarkozy's resignation - a position echoed by the opposition Communist and Greens parties - and solutions to the economic misery, racial discrimination and provocative policing they suffer. A few shots have been fired at police, without causing injury, and at least two people - a handicapped woman and a fireman - have been severely burnt by Molotov cocktails in past nights. The riots were sparked on October 27, when two teenagers were electrocuted in a tough, low-income suburb north of Paris as they hid in an electrical sub-station to flee a police identity check. Since then, overwhelmed police have found themselves powerless to stop the conflagration, which has seen a total of over 1 200 vehicles torched and more than 250 people arrested. The leader of one police union, Bruno Beschizza, has described the riots as "urban terrorism", but Paris Mayor Bertrand Delanoe of the opposition Socialist Party warned against hastily lumping together "one religion, Islam, and a few extremists" in apportioning blame.
Published on the Web by IOL on 2005-11-05 00:53:55
© Independent Online 2005. All rights reserved. IOL publishes this article in good faith but is not liable for any loss or damage caused by reliance on the information it contains. |