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Massive police deployment in Villiers-le-Bel
France: Three nights of rioting in response to youths
deaths
By Antoine Lerougetel
29 November 2007
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The town of Villiers-le-Bel on the northern outskirts of Paris
resembled a civil war zone on Tuesday night. An occupation force
of a thousand police, assisted by a helicopter with searchlights,
attempted to quell the rebellion of youth enraged by the death,
in a collision with a police car, of two teenagers, Larami, 16,
and Moushin, 15.
The rebellion was partially stifled by the massive police presence,
but several dozen cars were torched and waste bins set alight
in the town and nearby localities. At midnight 22 arrests had
been made. Some youth have already been summarily sentenced to
months in jail.
An attempt to whitewash the police for the deaths of Larami
and Moushin began in the immediate aftermath of the incident.
Police officials and Marie-Thérèse Givry, the Pontoise
district prosecutor, asserted that the cop car was travelling
slowly through the housing estate, home to the deceased, and that
the boys mini-motorcycle crashed into the vehicle.
This story has begun to unravel. An amateur video, obtained
by Le Monde, reveals that the damage done to the car suggests
that it was travelling at high speed.
The newspaper commented Wednesday: According to the IGPN
[National Police General Inspectorate], in charge of investigating
the circumstances of the collision, the photos that have appeared
in the press showing the vehicle with the front caved in and the
windscreen cracked up were not caused by the violence of the crash,
but could be explained by destruction caused by blows from iron
bars after the accident.
This element is one of the arguments put forward by the
police to support the version of a car going slowly and hit by
the mini-bike on the left front of the car.
The video pictures filmed a few minutes after the accident
... seriously undermine this hypothesis.
This confirms accounts given by witnesses in the neighbourhood,
which were dismissed by the government and the media.
France 2 TVs main news bulletin, at 8 pm Wednesday, ignored
this evidence and chose to emphasise the apparent corroboration
the video lends to the police story that the officers in the vehicle
remained with the victims of the crash until the emergency services
arrived.
The police initially also claimed that the motorbike the youth
were riding was stolen, but had to retract the accusation within
hours.
Apart from the daily abuse suffered by the youth at the hands
of the police, the experience of the 2005 rioting lends credence
to scepticism about police accounts. The upheavals at that time
were ignited when two boys attempting to escape a police chase
were electrocuted and received no assistance from their pursuers.
The friends of the boys were not believed when they challenged
police denials about the details of the event, subsequently proven
to be lies.
The BBC quoted the comment of a brother of one of the dead
teenagers, Omar Sehhouli, who said the rioting was not violence,
but an expression of rage.
On the third night of the clashes between youth and police
north of Paris, the disturbances spread to the municipalities
of Sarcelles, Garges-lès-Gonesse, Cergy, Ermont and Goussainville.
The youth, many of them from immigrant families living on bleak
working class estates, expressed their anger and despair by burning
cars, and trashing and setting fire to schools, libraries and
two police stations. The police report 130 injured over the three
nights.
The media has claimed that firearms have been used against
the police. Le Monde November 29 reports an enquiry into
two policemen with lead shot wounds. The hysteria
over the alleged shots being fired will no doubt be used to implement
new measures of state repression.
The hijacking and torching of a bus in Les Mureaux near Paris
and 20 car burnings in Toulouse on Tuesday night have been taken
as an extension of the Villiers-le-Bel rebellion.
The scope of the reaction has obliged President Nicolas Sarkozy,
who received the families of the dead boys at the Elysée
palace, to announce an independent judicial enquiry
into the deaths of Larami and Moushin. Sarkozy garnered more media
coverage, however, by ostentatiously visiting the wounded police.
Villiers-le-Bel was not affected by the 2005 riots, but shares
many characteristics with the other impoverished banlieuesan
official unemployment rate of over 20 per cent, poor transport
links with the city centre and a large youthful population. Out
of its 27,000 inhabitants, 60 per cent are under 25.
Interviewed in Libération November 27, sociologist
Jean-Marc Stébé pointed out that the conditions
of youth in areas like Villiers-le-Bel had not improved since
2005:
The National Observatory for Sensitive Urban Areas (ZUS)
notes that in 2007, unemployment, pauperisation, have not improved.
You can see that still today, amongst the youth able to work,
39.5 percent are unemployed, i.e., practically twice the
national rate.
The Socialist Party mayor of Clichy, where Bouna Traoré
and Zyed Benna died escaping the police in 2005, told Libération:
Since the autumn of 2005, the situation
has not improved. The inhabitants of the neighbourhoods feel forgotten.
Problems such as the improvement of transport to break out of
isolation are not advancing, yet there are high expectations.
Public action is so slow that it is becoming intolerable for people
who have been putting up with frustrations for too long.
He did not detail, needless to say, the role of the Socialist
Party and the Communist Party in local and national governments
who have presided over the running down of the council estates
that exist on the outskirts of every major French town.
An interview posted on the Nouvel Observateur web site
November 28 with Marie-Michelle Pisani, in charge of the Local
Mission, whose purpose is to enable youth from 16 to 25 who have
dropped out of school and are unemployed to get work, gives a
vivid picture of the problems they face.
Pisani confirmed that nothing has been done for the youth
since the urban explosion of 2005 ... Im not astonished
by the violence, youve been able to sense that its
going to explode for a long time, theres such despair, the
feeling that the future is blocked.
She said that since 2005 theyve been announcing
a Marshall Plan for the suburbs, but Ive seen no change
... Many associations that maintained the social fabric in the
neighbourhoods have had their funding cut.
The sense of being permanently under siege comes across powerfully
in interviews given to the press by inhabitants of Villiers-le-Bel.
Hussein, a construction worker from Mali, told the Times:
You can say that Sarkozy did this, as he stood near
where the boys had died, marked by some bouquets of flowers. Sarkozy
trains the cops like attack dogs and they come in here and treat
the kids worse than animals.
The actions of the French bourgeois politicians, deeply hostile
to the youth, are one aspect of the situation. But the greatest
culpability falls to the French left, from the Socialist
Party to the far left of the Ligue communiste révolutionnaire
(LCR) and Lutte ouvrière, all of whom, in the end,
are respectable parties of order. Their obstinate refusal to offer
a socialist solution to the crisis of French capitalism, despite
numerous opportunities, most recently the mass strikes of rail
workers and others earlier this month, is the principal reason
why the youth react with frustration and rage and not a conscious
opposition to capitalism.
In one way or another, the entire left is lined up against
the youth. The statements of Socialist Party (PS) officials have
all condemned the revolt of the youth and called for community
policing. The PS president of the Paris regional (Ile de France)
council, Jean-Pierre Huchon, issued a statement on Monday:
I condemn such an outburst of violence and destruction
towards firemen, the police, the public services and the enterprises
... I send my wishes for the injured superintendents recovery
and his colleagues.
François Hollande, the first secretary of the Socialist
Party, issued an entirely empty statement calling for social,
educational and Republican measures and made an appeal
to nationalism: The Republic is the answer, a common conception
of the nation. We must talk of citizenship and the Nation.
The UNSA (National Union of Autonomous Trade Unions, close
to the Socialist Party) stated in a communiqué issued Monday:
We must re-establish a police presence in the places
where its necessary, seven days a week and 24 hours a day.
We must establish a real policy of occupation of the neighbourhoods
on the one hand, get to know the local population better and on
the other hand, to facilitate more efficient repression because
thats getting ever more necessary.
This is from the left!
Meanwhile, Patrice Ribeiro, the national secretary of the Synergie
police union, evoked a civil war-type confrontation with the youth:
He told RTL radio:
But if this continues like this, we fear a tragedy on
one side or the other because our colleagues will not let themselves
be shot at like that indefinitely without firing back. ... Its
urban guerrilla warfare with conventional weapons and hunting
rifles.
The media reported that Prime Minister François Fillon
told firemen while visiting Villiers-le-Bel We will not
let go. We will fight with all the force the nation is capable
of. He continued: The government is totally determined
to act to bring back order to the land ... all means will be made
available to the police in order to achieve this. There
is no reason to believe these are empty threats.
Minister of the Interior Michèle Alliot-Marie declared
that the police occupation force would be kept in Villiers-le-Bel
as long as was necessary and that again on Wednesday night there
would be a police officer for every 27 inhabitants. Delinquents
could expect no tolerance. She has lyingly characterised
this outburst of frustration and rage as acts of organised
delinquency.
The pretence that the government will increase spending to
alleviate conditions in the miserable suburbs has been dropped
by some members of Sarkozys UMP (Union for a Popular Movement).
One deputy, Jacques Myard, let loose with a racist diatribe. Lets
open our eyes, he said, according to the Financial Times.
The problem is not economic. The reality is that an anti-French
ethno-cultural bias from a foreign society has taken root on French
soil and it is feeding on basic anti-French racism even if the
rioters have French nationality.
See Also:
France: Riots break out in Paris suburbs
after police crash kills youth
[27 November 2007]
French railway strike betrayed
[24 November 2007]
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