Chirac: French riots reveal 'identity crisis' (AFP) Updated: 2005-11-15 09:03
French President Jacques Chirac said the riots that have rocked the country
revealed a deep identity crisis and vowed to fight the "poison" of
discrimination faced by France's immigrant communities.
In his first address to the nation since the troubles began on October 27,
Chirac described the unrest as "a crisis of meaning, a crisis of identity,"
saying it was the sign of a "deep malaise" in French society.
Speaking hours after the government moved to extend by three months a state
of emergency decreed last week to subdue the urban violence, Chirac vowed to
uphold law and order, but also to tackle the underlying causes of the riots.
The president, who had been accused of taking a back seat in the crisis,
appealed directly to youths from the poor, high-immigration suburbs where the
unrest has been concentrated, assuring them they had a full place in French
society.
"I wish to tell the children from these difficult neighbourhoods, whatever
their origins, that they are all sons and daughters of the republic," he said in
a televised address.
French President Jacques Chirac delivers a
speech, some 18 days after the beginning of urban unrest in poor suburbs
of the Paris region and major provincial cities, in Paris November 14,
2005.[Reuters] | The president announced the
creation of a paid training and employment scheme for 50,000 youths from such
areas and a series of measures to improve access to the workplace and to combat
discrimination.
"We will build nothing lasting without fighting discriminations that are a
poison for society," he said.
"We will build nothing durable unless we recognise and take on board the
diversity of French society."
He said he would meet political leaders, businesses, unions and the media to
discuss "the essential question of diversity and youth employment in struggling
neighbourhoods."
Chirac also warned there would be no impunity for those who took part in the
violence, the worst rioting to hit France since the student uprising of May
1968, saying all would face justice.
He sent out a tough message to the parents of youths who joined the violence,
saying that those who failed to assume their responsibilities towards their
children "should be punished, according to the law."
He also vowed to crack down on illegal immigration and trafficking, and
called for the rules on family reunification to be strictly upheld.
Earlier Monday, the French government decided to extend until February a
state of emergency introduced last Tuesday to subdue the unrest. The cabinet has
agreed on a bill to go before parliament this week.
With both chambers dominated by the centre-right, the bill is expected to
pass easily. It will be presented to the national assembly on Tuesday and the
upper house senate on Wednesday.
Firemen work on a burned car in the suburbs of
Strasbourg, eastern France, 12 November
2005.[AFP] | The emergency, which authorises
curfews, house-to-house searches and bans on public gatherings, was activated
under a rarely-used 1955 law dating from the start of the Algerian war.
So far some 30 localities have been placed under nightly curfews for
unaccompanied children under 16, and two temporary banning orders for public
gatherings were imposed in Paris and Lyon over the weekend.
Chirac earlier told the cabinet the emergency powers were "strictly temporary
and will only be applied where they are strictly necessary."
The main opposition Socialists voiced "serious reservations" about the move,
with a spokesman noting that most prefects -- state-appointed local governors --
had chosen not to use curfew powers allowed under the crisis law.
National police figures showed the rioting continues to subside, with 284
cars burned overnight -- down from 374 the night before and well below the 1,400
destroyed at the peak of the trouble a week ago.
As well, 115 people were detained, bringing to more than 2,760 the number of
arrests since October 27.
The violence was sparked by the accidental deaths of two teenagers in an
electrical sub-station in a Paris suburb. After raging in the Paris region for
several days, it spread to poor high-immigration neighbourhoods across the
country.
More than 8,000 cars have been burned, scores of buildings wrecked and dozens
of police hurt in attacks carried out mainly by Arab and African youths.
Far-right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen told a rally of about 1,000 supporters of
his National Front party in Paris Monday that France was now "paying the bill"
for "mad and criminal immigration from the Third World."
French authorities are expected in coming days to start deporting a number of
foreign nationals convicted over the violence, despite fierce protests from
rights groups and the opposition.
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