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Ban on gatherings in Paris
By Antoine Lerougetel
14 November 2005
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Paris Police chief Pierre Mutz imposed a 22-hour ban on all
gatherings liable to cause or maintain disorder on the highway
or in public places. The ban was in place in the capital
from 10 a.m. Saturday to 8 a.m. Sunday, despite the fact that
rioting in and around the city has considerably subsided.
Ostensibly, this arbitrary infringement of democratic rightson
the long weekend starting with a national holiday celebrating
the anniversary of the First World War armisticewas intended
to prevent the spread of rioting from the suburban working class
estates that ring Paris to the centre of the city. Three thousand
police were mobilised to make the ban effective. The youth riots
have continued and developed in cities all over France since October
27, when two youth died escaping police arrest in the Paris suburb
of Clichy-sous-Bois.
Mutz told the press November 11: This order, confirmed
by the minister of the interior, is designed to provide a strong
and dissuasive legal framework for the police and gendarmes who
have been given instructions of great firmness. Now we must be
capable of saying thats enough to those who
want to cause riots in Paris.
The pretext for Mutzs action, on the orders of the minister
of the interior, Nicolas Sarkozy, is flimsy in the extreme. His
communiqué said the measures were being taken in
conformity with article 8 of the April 3, 1955 law on the state
of emergency ... in order to prevent disturbances of public order.
Police sources assert that messages being sent for several
days over the Internet and by text messages have been calling
for gatherings in Paris on November 12 and for violent actions
according to the words of their authors.
A police source told the press: Many youth have been
making appointments for a fight in Paris, in the Halles, on the
Champs-Elysées, at the Arc de Triomphe, Bastille Square,
République Square. The Renseignements généraux,
political police, reported that the most messages monitored
were targeting the Champs-Elysées and Bastille Square for
Saturday afternoon, one of them evokes the greatest riot
ever seen.
There is, of course, every chance that such messages may be
the work of provocateurs. Indeed, Molotov cocktails were reportedly
thrown at a mosque in Carpentras, an area of far-right activism.
The daily Libérations editorial
of November 12 asks about the Paris ban: Was it simply the
application of the precautionary principle or a futile and malicious
dramatisation? In any event, the greatest riot
did not take place.
The Paris préfecture, law enforcement office,
explained that the ban was intended to have a dissuasive
effect ... to strengthen sanctions if people were to come to Paris.
Penalties for violating the order are from a week to two
months imprisonment and/or a 3,750 euro fine ... This is
not to prevent honest citizens from walking about in Paris. Its
not gatherings as such that are envisaged.
Liberation comments: Besides, the gathering
of [civil rights organisations] Act Up, Droits Devant, and MRAP,
on Saturday 12 November at 5.30 p.m. in Saint-Michel Square, against
colonial methods and laws of exception is still authorised.
On the other hand, the likely lads in baseball caps
wont be allowed to get in with the risk of the police enforcing
discrimination based on skin colour (délit de faciès).
A sit-in on the Champs de Mars, near the Eiffel Tower, called
by community association leaders from the Paris suburbs, organised
in the collective Banlieues RespectsSuburbs Respectswas
also allowed to go ahead November 12. A spokesman, Zouair Ech-Chetouani,
said: We want the youth to stop the violence and go and
get their names on the electoral lists. A leaflet handed
out by organisers appealed to the president of the Republic
and to the government to pay real and sincere attention to the
youth in the working class neighbourhoods. The demonstration,
which attracted only 300 people, was recognised by the organisers
to have been a flop.
Le Figaro pointed November 12 to the arbitrary and excessive
powers that the 1955 law confers on Sarkozy and his police chiefs:
The ban activated this Saturday by the Paris police préfet
is a special measure which may be taken in the absence of the
application of the 1955 law, but, in that case, must be solidly
justified. In 2004, the presence of many foreign heads of
state in Paris, in attendance at the 60th anniversary celebrations
in commemoration of the Normandy landings, had also led to a similar
order in several places in the capital. This time, the entire
area of the capital is concerned. The fines are greater because
of the imposition of the state of emergency.
The only possible conclusion is that far more is on the agenda
than the containment of putative youth riots, for which existing
policing powers are entirely adequate. The social discontent engendered
by the continuing assault on workers rights and living standards
is now finding its expression in many forms, in rioting, strikes
and at the polls.
Civil rights campaigners have expressed grave disquiet in regard
to the police measures. Public law professor Ferdinand Mélin-Soucramanien
pointed out that the notion of a gathering liable to cause
or maintain disorder is in fact so vague as
to give total powers. The order at the very least violates
the right of assembly and the right to demonstrate. It is no surprise,
because the 1955 decree is precisely intended to suspend all fundamental
rights. Disproportionate means are being utilised to re-establish
order in the Republic.
Michel Tubiana, the former chairman of the League of Human
Rights, warned against the risks of excesses. The Paris
police chief is giving the law-enforcement agencies the right
to ban what they want, how they want.... There is a danger that
police officers will be more likely to perceive in a group of
three or four youth who are just a bit dark-complexioned a gathering
liable to disturb the peace than with a gathering of white people.
This order authorises absolutely arbitrary actions.
Already Sarkozy has been obliged to suspend eight policemen
filmed beating a handcuffed man in their custody. One officer
is in jail under provisional detention and four are under judicial
supervision.
The powers given under the 1955 law to the area police chiefs
and representatives of central government, the préfets,
as well as local town halls, are formidable. The cabinet can
declare a state of emergency in all or part of the country. Regional
officials can impose a curfew. The police can carry out raids
on suspected stockpiles of weapons. The minister of the interior
can issue house arrest warrants for those deemed dangerous to
public safety. Public meeting places can be closed downcafés,
clubs, halls and religious buildings. House searches can be carried
out by day or by night. The authorities can control media, film
and theatre performances.
Curfews are in force under the 1955 law in five areas of France,
where children under the age of 16 are forbidden to be out after
10 p.m. unless accompanied by an adult. Some local mayors have
taken their own initiatives, under normal legislation, in imposing
curfews in their jurisdictions.
The government is discussing an extensionbeyond November
20the 12-day decree allowed by the 1955 law. This would
require the approval of the National Assembly.
The number of vehicles torched on the 16th night (November
11-12) of the urban violence in France was up from the previous
night: 502 as opposed to 463. Of the 502, 86 were in Paris and
406 were in the rest of France. Paris had accounted for 111 cars
on the 15th night.
Michel Gaudin, director general of the national police, said,
The situation in Ile de France (the Paris region) has virtually
gone back to normal. He reported that 206 arrests had been
made throughout the country during the night, which brought the
total since October 27 to 2,440. By Saturday, 457 minors had been
brought before childrens magistrates and 101 are under a
committal order. Five hundred and fifty-eight people have been
given custodial sentences and are in jail.
See Also:
Frances state of emergencySarkozy
threatens mass deportations
[12 November 2005]
France: state of emergency escalates
attacks on the rights of youth and workers
[10 November 2005]
Oppose the state of emergency in France!
[9 November 2005]
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