Posted on 11/14/2005 8:43:39 PM PST by NormsRevenge
PARIS - President Jacques Chirac said Monday that the unrest in France's poor, largely nonwhite suburbs revealed a "crisis of identity" that the entire nation must heal with firmness and with measures that combat what he called the poison of discrimination.
Chirac speaking to the nation for the first time since the unrest erupted Oct. 27 said France must instill values and hope in the "sons and daughters of the Republic" growing up in the poor, largely immigrant suburbs ringing French cities.
French law must be obeyed, he said, but all of France its companies, unions and the media must work to change decades of discrimination with new hiring policies.
"These events testify to a profound malaise ... . This is a crisis of direction, a crisis of reference points, it is a crisis of identity," he said. "We will respond by being firm, being just and being faithful to the values of France."
Chirac, speaking with the flags of France and the European Union behind him, delivered the prime-time address on national TV after being conspicuously quiet as youths burned cars and buildings for 18 nights straight.
Since being hospitalized in September for an ailment that many suspected was a stroke, Chirac who turns 73 later this month had left Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin and Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy to speak for the French government. Chirac showed no sign of an ailment Monday but, unusually, wore spectacles.
The far right, which blames French ills on immigration, has sought to capitalize on the unrest. At a rally Monday that drew about 300 supporters, National Front leader Jean-Marie Le Pen, who faced off Chirac in 2002, castigated immigration policy.
"We let in 10 million foreigners over 30 years it's wild insanity. No country can handle that invasion," Le Pen said.
Philippe de Villiers, whose Movement for France promotes French sovereignty, echoed Le Pen, saying that "migratory waves" are at the root of the "war of the suburbs."
Chirac spoke after the Cabinet approved a measure to extend a state of emergency from 12 days to three months, with the possibility of ending the measure early. The parliament was to debate the bill Tuesday.
First put in place last Wednesday, the state of emergency gives regional authorities the power to call curfews, conduct day-and-night searches of homes or deport foreigners convicted in the violence. About 40 towns, including France's third-largest city, Lyon, have used the measure, imposing curfews on minors.
The unrest sparked by the accidental electrocution deaths of two teenagers as they hid from police in a power substation in the northeast Paris suburb of Clichy-sous-Bois has abated over the past week.
But the decision to extend the state of emergency until mid-February made clear that authorities fear the riots could flare up again.
The magnitude of the unrest has stunned France. The country's leadership and many citizens learned the depth of discontent in France's suburban housing projects, home to many immigrants from North Africa and their French-born children disillusioned by discrimination and soaring unemployment.
The civil unrest is the worst since the student-worker revolts of May 1968 and the worst ever in the suburbs, where sporadic violence has in the past been quickly capped.
Chirac said discrimination "drains the foundations of our Republic." But he appeared to rule out U.S.-style affirmative action.
"There is no question of entering into the logic of quotas," the French leader said. And he defended the French model of integration, which seeks to meld citizens and residents of all ethnicities into a single mold and which many officials and experts have questioned since the violence erupted.
"At stake is respect for the law but also the success of our policy of integration," Chirac said, stressing the need to fight illegal immigration, trafficking of all types and the "modern form of slavery" networks trafficking in illegal workers.
Chirac said he decided to create a corps of volunteers to train 50,000 youths by 2007. He told companies and unions they must encourage diversity and support employment for youths from tough neighborhoods.
France's media also must "better reflect the reality of France today," Chirac said.
"We will not build anything enduring without fighting this poison for society which is discrimination," he said.
Chirac condemned the violence but also reached out to disgruntled youths.
"I want to say to the children of difficult neighborhoods, whatever their origins, that they are all the daughters and sons of the Republic," he said.
But he urged their parents to exercise their authority, warning that "those who refuse should be punished as the law allows."
Scattered arson attacks continued into Monday. But the number of vehicle burnings dropped: 284 compared to 374 the previous night, police said. A week ago, 1,400 vehicles were torched in a single night.
This can't be so, because these are mostly muslims he's talking about. We are told they are people of "one of the great religions of the world", they belong to "the religion of peace". They are godly people whose hope is in allah, not in the world. How then, Mr. Chirac, are a nation of Western 'infidels' going to "instill values and hope" in such paragons of religious virtue? Unfortunately, it is they who are teaching Mr. Chirac and the French their own 'values'; the values of terrorism and intimidation, which work wonders against weak nations with weak leaders.
The feeling I get from Mr. Chirac's speech is similar to how I feel when our own liberal Democrats talk to the 'minority' community in America; they exude a condescending, pompous superiority as they convince them they are dependent upon government.
I could't agree more.
"He had a choice between dishonor and war. He chose dishonor. Now he shall have war."
idiot alert...
This 'identity crisis' sounds as if it's going to be the new excuse for everything. Greg Sheridan, Foreign Editor of The Australian newspaper writes;
'...what transforms a young man into a terrorist almost always turns on a crisis of identity...'
OK, so now I'm convinced. Once the terrorists know who they are, they'll stop wanting to kill us.
Geez, just to look at Chirac, I'm thinking, damn...this dweeb is in charge of a country?
No, that explanation ("discrimination") won't cut it. The 1968 riots, you see, were co-ed. Both genders participated.
Today's riots in France are committed by a single gender, a stark contrast to 1968...and a major difference that requires an explanation.
Hello Tintin, I'm so happy to read your comments on Freerepublic, but sad to see what is happening in our country. I am an Australian, born in Germany, in a small village in Bavaria.
I recently came across THE CHIRAC DOCTRINE
http://www.meforum.org/article/772
You might find this article of interest.
He's eighteen days too late.
'Chirac, speaking with the flags of France and the European Union behind him..'
Someone please photshop white flags so i can have new wallpaper.
Sacré Bleu!
Theres always someone who doesnt get the word.
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.
Then, there is this little problem...
For "Thunder on the Border," click the picture:
Kindly note tagline:
(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.")
Ah, the religion of peace train!
(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.")
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