Annie
Diamond Member
- Nov 22, 2003
- 50,848
- 4,828
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Obviously PE is correct, all this was just a blip and now France has it basically under control. Oh, we in the US could learn something about our gang problems. What's that you say? You didn't know that your gangs do this sort of thing regularly? Me neither. Just wait, I'm sure PE is going to enlighten us, we missed the boat somewhere along the line.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20051110...w5vaA8F;_ylu=X3oDMTA5aHJvMDdwBHNlYwN5bmNhdA--
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20051110...w5vaA8F;_ylu=X3oDMTA5aHJvMDdwBHNlYwN5bmNhdA--
Hundreds of cars burned in French violence
By Matthew Bigg 7 minutes ago
PARIS (Reuters) - Hundreds of cars were burned in France overnight in riots after the government imposed emergency measures aimed at halting two weeks of unrest rooted in discontent over conditions in poor suburbs.
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French police said at 2 a.m. on Thursday they had arrested 155 people and 299 cars were burned, compared to 195 people arrested and 458 cars burned at the same time the previous night.
A school in Belfort in eastern France was destroyed and vandalism at an EDF electricity station in Lyon caused some power loss in the town, police said.
But there were no reports of injuries and an official at police headquarters said the trend was "positive." More than 1,400 cars were burned overnight on Sunday, police said.
France imposed emergency measures on Wednesday in 38 suburbs, towns and cities including Marseille, Strasbourg, Lyon, Toulouse and the capital.
Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin published a decree invoking a 50-year-old law that gives regional government officials power to impose nightly curfews against the rioters.
Police arrested at least a dozen people and cars were burned in the southwestern city of Toulouse after youths clashed with police, local authorities said.
Authorities in Toulouse are yet to take advantage of the measures, which are supported by 73 percent of those surveyed for Le Parisien newspaper.
The violence by white youths as well as French-born citizens of African and Arab origin began in a Paris suburb on October 27 after the deaths of two youngsters apparently fleeing police.
It swiftly turned into a broader protest against racism, police treatment and poor job prospects in tough neighborhoods.
"TROUBLE SUBSIDING"
Claude Gueant, an aide to Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, said the unrest appeared to have peaked.
"We have reasons to believe that wisdom will prevail in the districts affected by the violence," he told Europe 1 radio.
Authorities in the Paris area where youths have burned hundreds of cars said Wednesday night appeared quiet.
"It's calm. The trouble is subsiding," a spokesman for the Paris district of Seine-et-Marne, where youths have burned cars on recent nights, told Reuters late on Wednesday.
Fears of riots erupting in other European countries have helped push down the value of the euro.
Economists expect consumer confidence to drop because of the rioting but say the impact on economic growth and the state budget is likely be marginal if calm returns soon. They see few signs of any long-term blow to foreign direct investment.
Villepin and
President Jacques Chirac have been under pressure to respond to the most serious rioting in France since the 1960s.
The violence has also added a dimension to rivalry between Villepin and Sarkozy, possible candidates for the presidency in 2007.
Villepin declined to take questions during parliamentary question time on Wednesday.
Sarkozy told deputies some 120 foreigners convicted of participating in the disturbances would be expelled, including those with residence permits.
The opposition Socialists have voiced only muted criticism of the emergency measures, passed in 1955 when Paris feared an insurgency in its then colony of Algeria could spread to France.
The Socialists used the measures in the mid-1980s to quell unrest in France's Pacific territory of New Caledonia.