
PARIS (Reuters)
Hundreds of French youths smashed shop windows, ignited trash cans and
pelted police with bottles through the night to protest against a
ban on a rave party they planned in the western city of Rennes,
officials said yesterday.
Two policemen were injured and about 30 youths were detained during the
unrest, which began mid-afternoon on Saturday as protesters chanting
“freedom!” and “we want a field!” marched through the capital of the
Brittany region.
Police in full riot gear fired tear gas to disperse the crowds but the
protesters, many of whom police said were drunk, stayed on until the
early morning.
Bernadette Malgorn, the local prefect in charge of public security,
said she banned the all-night dance party because organisers could not
say how many people would turn up at a field outside the city of about
200,000.
“They were incapable of saying how many sound systems there would be,
whether there would be 10 or 30, which would mean there would be 10,000
or 30,000 people there,” she said.
“If we had 30,000 ravers converging on Rennes, I could not handle such
a situation,” she told Europe 1 radio.
Rennes Mayor Edmond Herve, who had given permission for ravers to use a
field, criticised Malgorn – a civil servant appointed by Paris – for
overruling him last week.
“The ban on the rave party was a mistake and we’ve suffered the
consequences,” he said.
Rennes, a provincial university town, went through similar unrest last
year when a rave party was also called off shortly before it was due to
take place. |