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Why France is Burning
The Daily Mail and melaniephillips.com ^ | 11/07/05 | Melanie Phillips

Posted on 11/07/2005 10:49:11 AM PST by mojito

Night after night, France has been under attack by its Arab Muslim minority with the French authorities having totally lost control of the streets.

What started as an ugly localised disturbance in Clichy-sous-Bois — a grotty Paris suburb — after two Muslim youths were accidentally electrocuted has spiralled into an unprecedented national crisis. Extreme violent disorder has spread to cities such as Toulouse, Lille, Nantes, the cathedral town of Evreux in Normandy and even to the centre of Paris.

Thousands of cars have been set on fire and hundreds of people arrested across France. The rioters have torched post offices and fire stations, schools and synagogues, buses and warehouses, fired upon police, and doused a handicapped woman with petrol and set her alight.

Nicolas Sarkozy, the tough-minded Interior Minister, has been blamed for inflaming the situation by his uncompromising language. French policy in general has been blamed for herding poor Arabs into suburban ghettoes where they have been left to fester in high unemployment and poverty.

The disturbances are thus being portrayed as race riots caused by official discrimination and insensitivity. But this is a gross misreading of the situation. It is far more profound and intractable. What we are seeing is, in effect, a French intifada: an uprising by French Muslims against the state.

When the police tried to take back the streets, they were driven out with the demand that they leave what the protesters called the ‘occupied territories’. And far from the claim that the disturbances have been caused by French policy of segregating Muslims into ghettoes, this is a war being waged for separate development.

Some Muslims have even called for the introduction of the ancient Ottoman ‘millet’ system of autonomous development for different communities.

The director of the Great Mosque of Paris, Dalil Boubakeur, has previously suggested that France should be regarded as a ‘house of covenant’, by which he appears to mean that France should enter into an agreement with its Muslims to grant them autonomy within the state.

His response to the current violence is not to take steps to bring his own community under control but to suggest instead that the French government shows ‘respect’ and sends ‘a message of peace’.

But M. Sarkozy and the police are determined to take back the streets. The Muslims are equally determined to keep territory they feel they have conquered from the French state with which they feel no identification.

This crisis, however, did not start with the electrocution tragedy in Clichy-sous-Bois. It has been going on for decades. The scale of it is astonishing. Nine thousand police cars have been torched or stoned since the beginning of this year. The problem has not been M. Sarkozy’s tough approach. On the contrary — until now this permanent grumbling insurrection has simply been ignored.

For more than twenty years France’s Muslim areas have been out of control. Indeed, they only turned into Muslim ghettoes in the first place because Muslim violence and harassment forced everyone else out. And they became no-go areas for the police, seen by the Muslims as occupation forces entering their territory.

In schools in such areas, teachers trying to teach French or European history have been threatened with their lives by both pupils and their parents. In some cases young French people have converted to Islam just to escape the harassment.

Blaming an official policy of segregation is wide of the mark. The fact is that French Muslims want to be segregated. The ghettoes are a way of ensuring a separate Islamic existence without having to assimilate into French society.

The fact is that whatever policies different European countries have pursued to deal with minorities, they have not cracked this problem. France has enforced a rigid policy of state secularism and assumed that all minorities would adopt French values simply by being French.

By contrast, the British and other Europeans have adopted multiculturalism, which means giving minorities equal status to the majority, and have bent over backwards to be accommodating to them and not give offence.

Yet while France was burning, there were riots over several days in Denmark over the publication of cartoons satirising the prophet Mohammed. In the super-tolerant Netherlands, the film-maker Theo van Gogh was murdered exactly a year ago because he had made an ‘insulting’ film about Islam. The Dutch immigration minister has had to wear a bullet-proof vest after shots were fired into her office, and death threats have been made against other ministers who have spoken against Islamist violence.

In Britain, British Muslims turned themselves into human bombs last July to murder as many of their fellow citizens as they could. We are told this was because of the war in Iraq. But France was a principal opponent of that war, and yet it is now being torched from Normandy to the Mediterranean.

For every country, a different reason can be found to blame it for the attacks being mounted upon it. Yet the common factor is the hostility of Muslims to the countries in which they have settled.

Clearly, not all fall into this category. Thousands of British Muslims are highly integrated and live law-abiding and productive lives. But it is equally clear that across Europe, those moderates are either unable or unwilling to stop those who want to impose their values on the majority.

And European governments have played into their hands. As the writer Bat Ye’Or reveals in her book Eurabia, the European Union and the Arab League entered into a series of official agreements some thirty years ago guaranteeing that Muslim immigrants in Europe would not be compelled to adapt in any way ‘to the customs of the host countries.’

This is all bound up with the erosion of national identities across Europe. This has affected even France, once a ferocious proponent of French culture which was imposed through a centralised schools system, a strong police force and national military service.

But now the schools system and the police have been weakened and national service has gone. Banning the hijab (Islamic headscarf) in schools represented a flickering of the old national certainty as France sniffed the danger that had arisen in its midst. But it was too little, and maybe too late.

Even now Britain, France and the rest of Europe are still in varying stages of denial over Muslim unrest. Reluctant even to admit that religion is central to this phenomenon, they look instead for ways to blame themselves and use the insult of ‘Islamophobia’ to shut down debate.

The warning for us from the disturbing events in France could not be clearer. We must end the ruinous doctrine of multiculturalism and reassert British identity and British values — and insist that although Muslims are a valued minority, they must abide by majority rules.

But if France fails to hold the line, the fall-out will be incalculable for us and for all of Europe.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Philosophy; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: dhimmitude; france; insurgency; islamism; muslims; paris; parisriots; riots; uprising
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To: mojito
Thousands of cars have been set on fire

In typical Capitalist Pig fashion, when I read this I thought, "Thousands of cars destroyed?...now what publicly-traded company makes cars in France and Europe..."

21 posted on 11/07/2005 11:06:38 AM PST by Snardius (The seventh seal has been broken, the goat entrails point toward gotterdamerung, it's on.)
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To: backhoe

Excellent 9/11 picture and message. I had to save it!!

Thanks


22 posted on 11/07/2005 11:07:01 AM PST by Laserman
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To: Dunstan McShane
Yes, France has a great heritage way back when.

If they would only acknowledge it instead of being embarrassed by it.

23 posted on 11/07/2005 11:08:16 AM PST by Siena Dreaming
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Comment #24 Removed by Moderator

To: MrEdd

And therefore . . .


25 posted on 11/07/2005 11:09:04 AM PST by freedomlover (This Fall a Woman will be the Mother of a Mouse)
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To: MindBender26

Close all the mosques, deport the imams who are feeding this hate, and if anybody has a problem with it, deport them too.


26 posted on 11/07/2005 11:10:16 AM PST by ABG(anybody but Gore) (This tagline is under remodeling, thank you for your patience...)
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To: tdewey10
Belch. Sorry but I'll take the French (who have at least contributed a nice onion soup and crunchy potatoes to civilization) over the islamofascists.

But the Arabs gave us coffee. Starbucks is better than onion soup and the greek leeks are better onions anyway. Plus without the fwench the fruitloop formerly known as prince would never have made that awful Raspbery Beret song...

27 posted on 11/07/2005 11:10:23 AM PST by MrEdd
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To: mojito

"an unprecedented national crisis"??

I think Melanie needs to brush up on her history a bit....by French standards, far from being unprecedented, this is fairly run of the mill.


28 posted on 11/07/2005 11:10:28 AM PST by ConservativeDude
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To: MrEdd
Why France is Burning Because it's made of...Wood?

Because it's made of wusses?

29 posted on 11/07/2005 11:11:25 AM PST by taxesareforever (Government is running amuck)
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To: mojito

..."French policy in general has been blamed for herding poor Arabs into suburban ghettoes where they have been left to fester in high unemployment and poverty."

How can this BE in socialist utopia?


30 posted on 11/07/2005 11:13:35 AM PST by Nanny7
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To: mojito
The director of the Great Mosque of Paris, Dalil Boubakeur, has previously suggested that France should be regarded as a ‘house of covenant’, by which he appears to mean that France should enter into an agreement with its Muslims to grant them autonomy within the state.

It's coming. Surrender: phase 1.

31 posted on 11/07/2005 11:14:18 AM PST by Aquinasfan (Isaiah 22:22, Rev 3:7, Mat 16:19)
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Comment #32 Removed by Moderator

To: Cat loving Texan

If the French government cracks down, watch for muslim reinforcements to start coming in to join the the jihad. If France does not crack down, partioning of muslim sectors will no longer be de facto but for all intents and purposes a state within a state. Cooling off of current situation to a manageable situation will only allow more immigrants to join in the next round of battles. I see no good way out without massive force and restructuring of French society, not likely. Kiss France goodbye. Au revoir!


33 posted on 11/07/2005 11:14:49 AM PST by dblshot
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To: HangnJudge

Islam's Jihad against Europe is under way. Half the Moslems in Europe live in France. Are you listening Europe. Londonistan, Bagdad on the Seine, Damascus on the Rhine, Andadulsia (Moorish Spain), mabye France will be renamed Gaul. They used ot have courage there and a warrior caste. They held off the Roman Legions for 7 years at least. Now their Government is trying to appease these Monsters. Where is the Modern Charles Martel? Nowhere to be seen, sadly.


34 posted on 11/07/2005 11:17:32 AM PST by Khankrumthebulgar
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To: mojito
"Screech! Racism!"
35 posted on 11/07/2005 11:24:45 AM PST by pabianice
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To: Nanny7
How can this BE in socialist utopia?

As someone else pointed out, Marx was in favor of banning all immigration and emmigration. Socialism has nothing to offer immigrants but handouts.

36 posted on 11/07/2005 11:27:00 AM PST by bkepley
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To: Dunstan McShane

Excellent comment!! Regards,


37 posted on 11/07/2005 11:28:56 AM PST by MacArthur
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To: mojito

Well it's been over 60 years since we last went to their rescue, but it sounds like the French have dug themselves into another hole again. It's getting to be like clockwork.


38 posted on 11/07/2005 11:32:12 AM PST by tertiary01
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To: tertiary01

Excuse me, I forgot about their unfinished Vietnam business.


39 posted on 11/07/2005 11:33:22 AM PST by tertiary01
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To: Nanny7; All
From Monday night there will be a curfew imposed on Raincy.

Raincy is a neighbouring suburb to Clichy-sous-Bois were the unrest started 27 October. This is the first curfew that has been declared during the present riots. It is an exceptional measure, according to the mayor, Eric Raoult. There is no information at present how long the curfewis expected to last. [NB: Comment by idiot journo, not ScaniaBoy ;-) ]

(All according Paris, TT on Svenska Dagbladet website.)

Present car-count: 4700

40 posted on 11/07/2005 11:34:57 AM PST by ScaniaBoy (Part of the Right Wing Research & Attack Machine)
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