Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Paris suburbs on brink as riots leave 82 police injured

So Paris is burning again, huh? And why is that? In perusing this article published by the Independent (a British paper), it seems Nicolas Sarkozy is being painted the culprit both in this instance of violence and the previous riots of 2005. It is his fault... supposedly... because he is not sensitive enough to the sensibilities of the rioters.
Paris suburbs on brink as riots leave 82 police injured

Massive police reinforcements, led by the Prime Minister in person, attempted to stem a violent revolt, bordering on guerrilla warfare, on the northern fringes of greater Paris.

Cars and shops were set alight late last night but there was nothing like the massed attacks on police seen on Monday evening when 82 officers were injured, some by pellets from shot-guns and light hunting rifles.

...The town's library and two schools were burned to the ground on Monday night in running battles between police and a mob of 150 to 200 youths.

...Why should an accident produce such an explosion of violence? Why should boys, aged 14 to 17, some as young as 10, burn a library? What depths of hatred and anger would persuade them to fire hunting rifles and shot-guns at the police?

Two years after the suburban riots of 2005, France finds itself confronted with all of the same questions. Or, perhaps, even harder questions.

The evidence of the second night's rioting – more than 80 policemen injured by shotgun and airgun pellets, including four seriously – suggests that the level of urban violence has ratcheted up alarmingly. Few guns were used during the three weeks of nationwide riots in 2005.

On Monday night, the youths, mostly teenagers, but with some older leaders in their 20s, attacked the police head on. In 2005, there were thousands of incidents of arson but few direct confrontations.
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