Posted on 11/07/2005 3:32:31 AM PST by NickatNite2003
More than 30 policemen hurt, 800 vehicles burned in Frances poor suburbs; Frances largest Muslim organizations issued fatwa against unrest. Chirac: Republic quite determined, by definition, to be stronger than those who want to sow violence or fear Reuters
More than 30 police were hurt and 800 vehicles burned in Frances poor suburbs as unrest spread and intensified for an 11th night despite a vow by President Jacques Chirac to defeat it.
In Grigny, south of Paris, youths lured police into a housing estate and attacked them with pellet guns. A police spokesman said about 10 were injured, two seriously with pellets in the neck and legs.
The police union Action Police CFTC urged the government on Monday to impose a curfew on the riot-hit areas and call in the army to control the youths, many of whom are French-born citizens of Arab or African origin complaining of racial discrimination.
Nothing seems to be able to stop the civil war that spreads a bit more every day across the whole country, it said in a statement. The events were living through now are without precedent since the end of the Second World War.
The head of Frances main business group, Laurence Parisot, warned of the consequences of the violence for the French economy, notably on tourism and investment.
Frances image has been deeply damaged, she told Europe 1 radio.
Reacting to official suggestions that Islamist terrorists might be orchestrating some of the protests, one of Frances largest Muslim organizations issued a fatwa against the unrest.
'They really shot at officers'
The violence came shortly after Chirac broke a long silence with his first public comments since the unrest began on Oct. 27.
The republic is quite determined, by definition, to be stronger than those who want to sow violence or fear, he said after a domestic security council met to respond to the violence in which thousands of cars have gone up in flames so far.
An Interior Ministry statement said 839 more vehicles were torched overnight. Thirty-four police were injured in clashes and 186 rioters detained.
They really shot at officers, Said one officer after about 200 youths attacked his colleagues in Grigny. This is real, serious violence. Its not like the previous nights. I am very concerned because this is mounting.
Opposition politicians criticized government policies towards difficult neighborhoods.
The least we can say is that the governments response has been confused and weak, Jean-Marc Ayrault, head of the Socialist Party in the National Assembly, wrote in Le Figaro daily newspaper.
Lens: Firebomb thrown at church
Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, whose tough line has been widely criticized but was apparently endorsed by Chiracs call for order to be restored before any measures can be taken, visited the two injured policemen in hospital.
Further violence was reported in other cities, including Nantes, Rennes, Strasbourg, Lens and Toulouse.
Youths seized a bus in Saint-Etienne in central France, ordering passengers off and torching the vehicle. The driver and one passenger were hurt. In the eastern city of Strasbourg, rioters lobbed Molotov cocktails into a primary school.
In Toulouse in the southeast, a blazing car was pushed into a metro entrance. At Lens in the north, a firebomb was thrown at a church. In nearby Lille, about 50 cars were torched and a Belgian television reporter was beaten up as he filmed.
The rioting began with the accidental electrocution of two youths fleeing police in Clichy-sous-Bois outside Paris.
Chiracs government has come under increasing pressure to halt the riots, sparked by frustration among ethnic minorities over racism, unemployment and harsh treatment by police.
Many feel trapped in the drab suburbs, built in the 1960s and 1970s to house waves of immigrant workers. Their French-born children and grandchildren are now out on the streets demanding the equality France promised but, they say, failed to deliver.
Later on Monday, Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin is due to announce measures for Frances poor suburbs, where many immigrants from Africa live in bleak social housing projects.
We cannot accept any no-go areas, Villepin said after meeting Chirac on Sunday, adding the government would step up security where necessary. Some 2,300 extra officers have already been drafted in to quell riots that have spread from Pariss suburbs to other towns, unnerving Frances European neighbors.
OOOOOooohhhhh! I'll bet they're just SHAKING in their ninja masks!
Now ask me what i'll think if this
Fatwa doesn't calm things down..then
ask me what I think if it *does*.
Since when is TERRORISM simply referred to as UNREST? Unbelievable!
Yoda to Chirac: Say not. DO. Or Do not.
I got that, "Unrest" on my pager as well. Made me sick.
Dear France:
Your leaders have failed you. Act not against these animals or you'll lose your country.
not=now
France will act! I mean its going to happen now! Really soon! You better not ignore this warning! You North African immigrants making this unrest are going to pay! I swear you are going to pay! Very soon! I really mean it!
Gag me.
Maybe, but not by much over where they previously stood.
Chirac: " The republic is quite determined,..."
Determined to not do a thing?
Why not bring this before the UN? I'd recommend that Chirac accept the help offered by Libya.
The events were living through now are without precedent since the end of the Second World War.
I think I ruined my keyboard spewing coffee LMAO.
The French are getting tough. But the rioters know what to do. Like the Germans said, "Don't fire until you see the whites of their surrender flags!"
Well, given that the French don't have any weapons of their own I guess they're required to rely on the duplicitous worm, Chirac.
Nothing seems to be able to stop the civil war that spreads a bit more every day across the whole country.The events were living through now are without precedent since the end of the Second World War.
World War II is going to seem mild in comparison to what's to come, unless you people face reality IMMEDIATELY, throw out of office the likes of Chirac and Villepin, stop living in some delusional dream world, and TAKE MEANINGFUL ACTION NOW!
This is not a French civil war. It is not a European war. It is a world war.
President Bush recognized it on September 11, 2001.
He sadly acknowledged that the civilized world was already at war and, though the civilized people of the world had not realized it, had been at war for some time.
President Bush and the rest of the civilized world did not want war. It was thrust upon us. However, we have no choice but to win it.
President Bush spoke truth, and he immediately established a course of meaningful action to win this war.
However, millions in the West chose denial rather than the recognition of truth and meaningful action. They have done everything within their power to oppose President Bush, to frustrate his actions, and to destroy him personally and politically.
These people are the same Neville Chamberlains who ignored and denied the realities of the Nazi threat, when it could have been aborted, and World War II was the result.
President Bush--like Winston Churchill--has been truthful, has given sound warnings, has prescribed wise courses of meaningful action, and has shown brilliant and courageous leadership.
If the people of the world refuse to acknowledge the truth, to heed the warnings, to take meaningful action while they still can, and to choose and follow wise leadership, the results will be a world-wide tragedy worse than World War II.
The truth is there!
The people of the world had better accept it.
The only thing missing now is "a strongly-worded UN resoltuion", without the threat of sanctions or force, of course (the Russians and the Chinese would have vetoed the use of force/sanctions). Looks like the frogs are up to their asses in it. C'est la vie! Couldn't resist that one....
I do not believe that even President Bush understands the stakes. Only Pope Benedict XVI has captured the situation when he said we stand at the brink of a new dark age.
Actually, next I'd expect a UN resolution warning the French that violence is unacceptable and repugnant, and that they should work things out peacefully.
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