French riots continuing to spiral out of control
Riots in France's poor city suburbs appeared to be spiralling out of control on Monday after the worst night of violence to date, in which more than 30 police were injured and 1 400 cars burnt across the country.
"The shockwave has spread from Paris to the provinces," said Michel Gaudin, director-general of the national police.
For an 11th night in a row youths predominantly from France's large Arab-Muslim minority rampaged through their out-of-town neighbourhoods, setting fire to vehicles, businesses and public buildings and attacking police with stones and other projectiles.
Police figures showed that 1 408 vehicles were destroyed overnight - more than previous record of 1 300 on Saturday - and 395 people arrested. Most of the cars - nearly 1 000 - were targeted in towns and cities outside Paris, reflecting the way the violence has spread from its original flashpoint.
In addition 36 policemen were injured overnight - the worst figure to date - amid signs that rioters were deliberately seeking out clashes with the security forces.
At Grigny in the southern Paris suburbs two police officers were hospitalised after being hit by gun-shot in what colleagues said was an ambush set by a gang of youths.
"Their aim is to get us. It is to kill policemen," an officer who witnessed the incident told interior minister Nicolas Sarkozy who visited their headquarters overnight.
The violence - with was sparked on October 27 by the accidental deaths of two teenagers in an electrical sub-station in a northern Paris suburb - has fanned across the country in a nightly ritual of copycat attacks by disaffected youths complaining of economic misery and social discrimination.
Few regions of the country have been spared, with riots on Sunday night in the southern towns of Toulouse, Toulon and Draguignan, Strasbourg in the east and Nantes in the west. Tourist centres such as the Loire valley town of Blois and Quimper in Brittany were also hit.
Even the small village of Villedieu-du-Temple, 12km from the southern town of Montauban, saw six postal vehicles destroyed.
Among the targets of the rioters were churches, nursery and primary schools, town-halls and police stations as well as warehouses, car dealerships and a film-studio at Asnieres outside Paris. In the Normandy city of Rouen rioters used a car as a battering ram against a police station.
Overall more than 5000 cars have been burned and more than 1 000 people arrested since the beginning of the trouble, which is the worst to hit France since the May student uprising in 1968.
President Jacques Chirac intervened personally for the first time since the start of the unrest, summoning an inner cabinet meeting on Sunday evening and afterwards declaring that "the absolute priority is the re-establishment of security and public order".
A leading Muslim group - the Union of Islamic Organisations in France (UOIF) - issued a fatwa or formal instruction urging Muslims not to take part in acts of violence.
The group - which espouses a radical interpretation of Islam close to the Egypt-based Muslim Brotherhood - is the largest component of the French Council for the Muslim Religion (CFCM), the official representative body for Islam in France which was set up by Sarkozy two years ago.
Australia and Japan on Monday joined Britain, Canada, Russia and the United States in issuing public advisories that recommended that tourists to France exercise caution because of the violence.
Posted by: Dan Darling 2005-11-08 |