The scope of the problems around Paris and France
We reported previously from the Guardian:
Youths seized a bus in Saint-Etienne, in southern France, ordered passengers off, and torched the vehicle; its driver and one passenger were hurt, officials said. In Rouen, in the north, rioters pushed a burning car against a police building; nobody was hurt, police said. Cars were also burned in Nantes, Rennes and Orleans. A national police spokesman said a total of 2,200 cars were burned around the country on Friday and Saturday nights, including in previously untouched cities or towns like Nantes in the west, Avignon in the south and Evreux in Normandy.
The Telegraph reports some of the same and provides a useful graphic of the widespread violence:
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Last night about 30 police were reported injured by buckshot in Grigny, south of Paris. Youths seized a bus in Saint-Etienne and set it alight. In Rouen a burning car was pushed against a police station while cars were burned in Nantes, Rennes and Orleans.
Le Monde reports another 800+ cars torched and three dozen police wounded:
Au moins 839 véhicules incendiés et 186 interpellations avaient été enregistrés lundi à 04H00 (03H00 GMT) en France à l’issue de la onzième nuit de violences urbaines en banlieue parisienne et en province, selon un bilan provisoire de la police nationale. Trente-quatre policiers ont été blessés; dont deux ont été la cible de tirs de grenaille à Grigny, dans le département de l’Essonne (sud).
We credit the weak response from the Chirac government as part of the resaon this violence has gone on for so long. Le Monde:
A l’issue d’un conseil de sécurité intérieure, dimanche, à l’Elysée, le président de la République, Jacques Chirac a déclaré à la presse que la “priorité” était le “rétablissement de la sécurité et de l’ordre public” dans la crise des banlieues qui secouent depuis dix jours la France. “Nous avons pris un certain nombre de décisions de nature à renforcer encore l’action de la police et de la justice, car aujourd’hui la priorité absolue c’est le rétablissement de la sécurité et de l’ordre public”, a déclaré M. Chirac après une réunion du Conseil de sécurité intérieure regroupant notamment le premier ministre et les ministres de l’intérieur et de la défense.
M. Chirac n’a pas précisé ces mesures. “Ceux-là qui veulent semer la violence ou la peur, ceux-là seront appréhendés, jugés et punis”, a-t-il poursuivi en insistant par ailleurs sur le “respect de chacun, la justice et l’égalité des chances”, pour apaiser la situation dans les banlieues. De son coté, le premier ministre Dominique de Villepin a lancé dimanche “un appel solennel à la responsabilité de tous” face à la crise dans les banlieues, en affirmant que “la violence n’est pas la solution“.
The message has already been made clear to the rioters, arsonists, and bus-hijackers: the French government is weak, and will do almost nothing to stop you. Contrary to the words of de Villepin, violence certainly does seem to be part of the solution. Party on, Islamist dudes!


November 6th, 2005 at 10:50 pm
“The “youths” do not blame the French, they despise them.”| The Brussels Journal
The very best column on the situation. Really hits the US MSM
for the dribble that is their and the BBC’s analysis of the situation.
A must read – Austin Bay provided the original link.
Regards,
Larwyn
Click here: Show Them Who Is the Boss in France | The Brussels Journal
http://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/444
Show Them Who Is the Boss in France
From the desk of Paul Belien on Sun, 2005-11-06 19:19
Here are today’s headlines in Belgium’s (only) Sunday newspaper De Zondag. Page One: “No Sign of Revolt in Belgium Yet.” Page Five: “Violence Moves Towards Belgium.” It almost sounds like a weather forecast, anticipating the onslaught of a hurricane that is inevitably coming.
What is happening in France has been brewing in Old Europe for years. The BBC speaks of “youths” venting their “anger.” The BBC is wrong. It is not anger that is driving the insurgents to take it out on the secularised welfare states of Old Europe. It is hatred. Hatred caused not by injustice suffered, but stemming from a sense of superiority. The “youths” do not blame the French, they despise them.
READ THE REST OF COLUMN.
November 7th, 2005 at 4:03 pm
You got it. To say that something is “unacceptable” without doing anything is to say that you accept it. Chirac and de Villepin accept that here will be rioting that goes unpunished. Imagine being on a French police force right now.