France Declares State of Emergency in Riot-Hit Suburbs

Published: 9 November 2005 y., Wednesday

The French government on Tuesday declared a state of emergency in riot-hit parts of the country in order to combat the worst outbreak of urban unrest since the May 1968 student revolt.

Meeting in crisis session under the chairmanship of President Jacques Chirac, the cabinet invoked a 50-year-old law originally drawn up at the start of the Algerian war which permits the declaration of curfews, house-searches and a ban on public meetings. The measure will come into effect at midnight Tuesday after the government has issued a decree setting out the geographical limits for the state of emergency.

 In remarks conveyed by his spokesman, Chirac said he had decided to "give the forces of law and order supplementary means in order to assure the protection of our fellow citizens and their property... It is necessary to hasten a return to calm." 

It was the toughest response to date to nearly two weeks of rioting in the country's high-immigration suburbs which has left more than 6,000 cars burned, public and private property destroyed, tens of policemen injured and one civilian death. More than 1,500 people -- mainly Arab and black youngsters -- have been detained.

Šaltinis: dw-world.de
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Alexandr Vondra visits Turkmenistan, Turkey and Bulgaria ahead of the Eastern Partnership and Southern Corridor summits

The Deputy Prime Minister for EU affairs participated as a speaker yesterday 23 April at a high-level conference in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan. more »

Mothers of Srebrenica victims at the European Parliament

In the summer of 1995 over 8,000 Bosnian men and boys were murdered in Srebrenica by Bosnian Serb forces as the international community stood impotent. more »

Graffiti used to woo Indian voters

In Kolkata city, politicians use cartoons and graffiti as a colorful campaigning tool to depict their rivals. more »

Somali faces piracy charges in US

Abduwali Muse, a young Somali, now faces charges of piracy and conspiracy for his alleged role in the attempted hijacking of the Maersk Alabama freighter off the coast of Somalia. Questions remain about the subjects age. more »

Obama open to torture prosecutions

President Barack Obama said he's leaving the door open to prosecuting some Bush Administration officials who laid the legal groundwork for harsh interrogation of detained terror suspects. more »

Opening of the session: MEPs express sympathy for victims of Italian earthquake

At the start of this week's Strasbourg plenary session, the President of the European Parliament, Hans-Gert Pöttering, expressed the EP's deep sympathy with the victims of the recent earthquakes in Abruzzo, Italy. more »

U.S. dismay at jailed journalist

The Iranian-American journalist Roxana Saberi, sentenced to eight years in jail for spying for the United States by an Iranian court. more »

India starts marathon vote

A steady stream of India's voters have been heading to the polls to have their say in the world's biggest democratic elections. more »

Crisis in Moldova: MEPs call for calm and underline solidarity with Romania

MEPs called on Wednesday for further diplomatic efforts to restore calm in Moldova, which is in the throes of a political crisis following the contested parliamentary election of 5 April. more »

Pirates strike again

Somali pirates aren't letting up in their attacks against ships off the coast of Somalia. more »