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France responds to urban crisis (BBC: de Villepin "strike the right note". Yeah right)
BBC ^ | 8 November 2005 | By William Horsley

Posted on 11/07/2005 5:32:11 PM PST by NZerFromHK

French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin seemed to strike the right note in his response to the riots.

But his proposals also showed up the scale of the changes called for in society, to heal the deep wounds that have been exposed.

Mr de Villepin has made a start. No more evasion, and not too much rhetoric about the "values of the Republic."

He has called the situation by its real name - "a crisis in France's cities."

Others have called it a rebellion by an angry underclass.

Mistakes admitted

The French prime minister struck a balance between denouncing the violence and focusing on the future.

The government's response would be "firm and fair". All acts of law-breaking were to be severely condemned.

But France, he acknowledged, had made mistakes in its treatment of its immigrants, especially those from Africa.

Giving a response was a tricky task for a prime minister known for his dashing style but also his record of never having been elected.

He is also known for his romantic notions of French history, but his main goal now is to rescue the sagging reputation of his mentor, President Jacques Chirac.

If Mr de Villepin can fight his way out of this black period he may succeed Mr Chirac as president. If he fails, that prize could go to his arch-rival, Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, or another.

After 12 days and nights of riots and car-burning, the prime minister's much-awaited response was in two parts - restoring law and order, and tackling the problems of unemployment of up to 40%, and deep alienation on the part of many among France's more than five million people of Arab and African descent.

Mr de Villepin stressed the government's first priority was to restore calm and stop the nightly violence in the cities and suburbs. He announced:

* Continuing large-scale police deployments, including 1,500 extra reserve officers, in troubled areas

* Swift and effective justice for all law-breakers

* A judicial inquiry into the deaths of two teenagers in Clichy-sous-Bois, Paris, which sparked the riots

* New powers for the mayors of French cities and municipalities, to impose curfews and maintain order

* A restoration of spending programmes (recently cut back) on community associations of all kinds, to promote social solidarity

'Harassment'

Community leaders from France's main ethnic minorities have demanded new laws to end discrimination in jobs and housing, and an end to what they say is police harassment.

They resent police searches for "sans-papiers" - illegal immigrants - and the constant threat of deportation hanging over them. They also want the right to vote, even for those without French citizenship.

In response, Mr de Villepin proposed:

* A tripling of state scholarships in poor areas, and increased spending on training schemes for under-achieving young people. Some 150,000 children, mainly from immigrant families, are leaving school without any qualifications

* A lowering to 14 of the age when children wanting to quit school can begin an apprenticeship; this idea was at once criticised by some teachers' leaders

* More company job training schemes in problem areas. Immigrants with a college degree complain they rarely even get job interviews because of blatant discrimination

* An urban renewal programme, re-building districts damaged by the riots and building more humane living environments

* More, unspecified, sanctions to counter social discrimination of all kinds

The prime minister skirted round the highly sensitive issue of Islam, the religion of the great majority of the immigrants and their offspring.

Many French Muslims demand more public recognition by the state, and resent the law which bans the wearing of Muslim headscarves.

Mr de Villepin said only that in France all faiths were respected. He acknowledged public concerns about the growth of radical Islamic thinking, but played down the urgency of the issue.

The recent riots are called the worst since 1968. The government has taken its stand on how to repair the damage.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bbc; cheeseeating; devillepin; dominiquedekerry; france; fwance; insurgency; intifada; jihad; msmbias; parisriots; quagmire; surrender; terrorism; uprising
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To: NZerFromHK
couple of Maverick missiles through the windows of their executive suites? that might be a good start..
61 posted on 11/07/2005 9:58:11 PM PST by Americanwolf (Support the Minutemen Civil Defense Corp...Doing the Job our government won't !)
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To: Cobra64
"Wanna bet? The French will be crying on our shoulder, asking for men, materiel, and U$Dollars."

Just subcontract the job to the Iraqi army.

62 posted on 11/07/2005 11:18:27 PM PST by spokeshave (A return to unified Democratic government is so unlikely as not to be worth considering)
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To: NZerFromHK; All
Is Paris Burning? ( Religion of Peace® Alert )
Click the picture:

Crosslinked:

Islam, The Alleged Religion of Peace® ( TARP™ )? Click this picture:

No, I am not exaggerating. Click the pic, go to "last," and read backwards.
If you are not informed about this stuff, you will be made sick. If you are informed, you will be made mad, all over again.


May I call attention to my tagline?

63 posted on 11/08/2005 1:38:39 AM PST by backhoe (The Silence of the Tom's ( Tired Old Media... ))
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To: backhoe

Sure, be my guest. The BBC has become Braindead Broadcasting Corp.


64 posted on 11/08/2005 1:41:00 AM PST by NZerFromHK (Alberta independentists to Canada (read: Ontario and Quebec): One hundred years is long enough)
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To: NZerFromHK
The BBC has become Braindead Broadcasting Corp.

When I was a teenager, I used to tune in the BBC on shortwave radio because they had the most even-handed reporting-- it's a pity to see what they devolved into.

65 posted on 11/08/2005 1:48:31 AM PST by backhoe (The Silence of the Tom's ( Tired Old Media... ))
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To: NZerFromHK
De Villain's prescription is more socialism. Nothing quite succeeds like failure, eh? When its led to destructive violence, bribe or try to buy off the insurgents with taxpayer-funded goodies. The law and order part is an afterthought. But that's par for the course for a pompous coiffed intellectual with no appreciation for the real nature of the situation facing his country. Why, we'll just redouble welfare state spending!

(Denny Crane: "I Don't Want To Socialize With A Pinko Liberal Democrat Commie.Say What You Like About Republicans. We Stick To Our Convictions. Even When We Know We're Dead Wrong.")

66 posted on 11/08/2005 1:51:04 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: backhoe
Oh, they were still occasionally so well into the 1990s. I remember the times when the Conservative Party was still in power, and the Beep produced a documentary about Communist Fifth Columns in modern Western European countries in 1994. It was bold enough to unmask that the KGB were inciting racial riots in the United States in the 1960s and 70s, and attempted to bribe Martin Luther King Jr for collaboration, but King flatly refused.

They went downhill right after Tony Blair came in office. It was fast becoming just another copy of typical liberal news outlet as 1999 approached like the US ABC or Canada's CBC. The last straw for me was in 2000 when it claimed "US armies committed genocide on South Korean civilians during the Korean War" in 2001. The only other source of information I got on this "news" was a notoriously North Korea mouthpiece site, www.kimsoft.com.
67 posted on 11/08/2005 2:00:39 AM PST by NZerFromHK (Alberta independentists to Canada (read: Ontario and Quebec): One hundred years is long enough)
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To: NZerFromHK

"The government's response would be "firm and fair". All acts of law-breaking were to be severely condemned. "

What a pathetic joke.


68 posted on 11/08/2005 6:08:10 AM PST by Levante
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