Paris riots gain dangerous momentum (AP) Updated: 2005-11-04 10:46 Official assurances that police were not directly responsible for the deaths
have not stemmed the unrest, which authorities said spread Wednesday night to at
least 20 Paris-region towns. Government offices, a police station, a primary
school and a college, a Clichy-sous-Bois fire station and a train station were
among the buildings targeted.
Rioters also set fire to a gym near the Les Tilleuls housing complex in the
Seine-Saint-Denis region. It burned and smoldered Wednesday night as residents
looked on in despair.
"Where is she going to practice now?" asked Mohammed Fawzi Kaci, an Algerian
immigrant whose 8-year-old daughter took gymnastics classes at the facility.
The violence also has cast doubt on the success of France's model of seeking
to integrate its immigrant community — its Muslim population, at an estimated 5
million, is Western Europe's largest — by playing down differences between
ethnic groups. Rather than feeling embraced as full and equal citizens,
immigrants and their French-born children often complain of police harassment
and of being refused jobs, housing and opportunities.
"It is very tough when you are stuck midway between France and Algeria or
Morocco," said Sonia Imloul, who works with troubled teens in Seine-Saint-Denis
and was born in France of Algerian parents. She added: "Perhaps we should be
told clearly to stop having children, because they have an 80 percent chance of
not succeeding."
On Thursday, rioters fired four shots at police and firefighters but caused
no injuries, said Jean-Francois Cordet, the top government official for
Seine-Saint-Denis. Nine people were injured in other unrest and 315 cars were
torched across the Paris area, officials said.
Traffic was halted Thursday morning on a commuter line linking Paris to
Charles de Gaulle airport after stone-throwing rioters attacked two trains. A
passenger was slightly injured by broken glass.
Police have made 143 arrests during the unrest, Interior Ministry Nicolas
Sarkozy said.
Residents and opposition politicians have accused Sarkozy of fanning tensions
with his tough police tactics and talk — including calling troublemakers "scum."
"Sarkozy's language has added oil to the fire. He should really weigh his
words," said Kaci, whose daughter lost her gym. "I'm proud to live in France,
but this France disappoints me."
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