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Paris: As authorities launch murder enquiry into Vincent-Auriol
fire, thousands march in anger and solidarity
By Antoine Lerougetel
7 September 2005
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The Paris public prosecutors office has launched a criminal
investigation into the blaze that killed 17 African immigrants
living at 20 Boulevard Vincent-Auriol on the evening of August
25-26. Four days after the Vincent-Auriol fire, seven more Africans
were killed when fire erupted in a dilapidated apartment block
in Paris Marais district.
On August 26, public prosecutor Jean-Claude Martin ruled out
any possibility the fire at 20 Boulevard Vincent-Auriol could
have been caused by a short-circuit, noting that the building
lacked a functioning electrical system. The fires rapid
spread also excluded it having been caused by a discarded cigarette
end.

Although police and fire authorities say that they have not
found any traces of petrol or other combustibles in the stairwell
where the Vincent-Auriol fire is known to have originated, they
concede this does not mean such substances werent used to
set the building alight. Even small amounts of hydrocarbons can
cause large fires, and then be washed away during fire fighters
efforts to douse the flames.
The prosecutors decision to label the Vincent-Auriol
fire a deliberate destruction .. causing death to people
only became public when it was reported in the Sunday evening
edition of Le Monde.
But for many, if not most, of the eight thousand who demonstrated
in Paris Saturday to draw public attention to the connection between
the lack of social housing, the French governments anti-immigrant
policies, and the deaths of 48 Africans in three separate Paris
apartment fires in the last four-and-half months, the launching
of a criminal investigation will merely have confirmed their suspicions.
The Vincent-Auriol dead were murdered.
Yet much as the demonstrators were anxious to see any persons
implicated in arson apprehended, they were no less insistent that
those principally responsible for the recent spate of fire deaths
are the French authorities: those in government at the national
and local level who have allowed tens of thousands to live in
dilapidated buildings, officially pronounced unfit for human habitation.
The recent series of fires in the French capital has exposed
the existence of a large group of people, who, while not technically
homeless, have been forced to seek shelter in structures that
lack such basic amenities of urban life as electricity, drinking
water, and toilets. These very poor, while disproportionately
comprised of immigrants sans papiers (i.e. those whom the
authorities have denied work permits), also include immigrants
from outside the EU holding work and residency permits, and European
and French-born workers.
The most widespread demand on Saturdays demonstration,
especially from the people directly affected, was requisitionthe
official takeover of some of the thousands of uninhabited houses
and apartments in Paris in order to house people in need and in
danger. A law dating from 1948 gives the authorities full powers
to do this. But local and national governments of the both the
official left (Socialist Party and Communist Party) and the right
have refused to use this law, out of deference to the landlords
and property companies.
A leaflet, handed out by demonstrators who called themselves
the mal-logés (ill-housed) still alive,
said the entire political establishment bears responsibility for
the social crisis that produced last months tragedies at
Vincent-Auriol, Marais, and the April fire at the Paris-Opera
hotel. In answer to the question, Who are the people responsible?,
the leaflet replies, The state of course .... (Minister
of Interior Nicolas) Sarkozy has announced the eviction of 60
squats. ... But also the Paris town hall, run by the left...
The leaflet also indicts the SIEMP, a town-hall financed property
company, run by the chairman of the Green group on the Paris
council, René Dutrey and accuses him of being doubly
responsible for the death of the mal-logés.
The SIEMP is charged with the responsibility for the
eradication of conditions unfit for human habitation in the capital,
but if they destroy overcrowded slum dwellings, it is in order
to build a few homes where you need a salary of 1,800 euros net
for a four room flat. In fact the SIEMPs real job is to
clear the poor out of Paris.
The leaflet continues: The SIEMP is more directly responsible,
because it was the owner of two blocks of apartments which burned
in Paris in the past few months: rue de Pixéricourt in
April and rue du Roi-Doré on the night of the 29 and 30
August.
The leaflet accuses the charities to whom the political establishment
have ceded much responsibility in the social housing field, for
running apartment buildings that are unfit for human habitation.
This is the case with Emmaüs, whose offshoot France Europe
Habitat was managing the Boulard Vincent-Auriol building,
and receiving rent without maintaining it.
The leaflet finishes with an indictment of the left parties
which control many of the Paris regions town halls: In
Paris, the SP (Socialist Party), the Greens, the PCF (Communist
Party) let the mal-logés die.
The universal object of the anger of the demonstrators and
survivors was Nicolas Sarkozy, chairman of the ruling UMP, leading
contender for the presidency in 2007 and, as the Minister of the
Interior, Frances top cop. Sarkozy has responded to the
series of tragedies in Paris with contempt and brutality. In line
with the neo-fascist National Front of Jean-Marie Le Pen, he blames
an excessively generous immigration policy for the
fire deaths.
Under the pretext of protecting the inhabitants, he has ordered
the police to evacuate by force some sixty designated squats.
Those evicted have been offered accommodation for two weeks in
hotels, after which they risk being thrown into the streets, since
Sarkozy and the authorities have offered them no further assistance.
On Fridays television news there were scenes reminiscent
of the August 1996 smashing of the doors of the Saint Bernard
church in Paris and the violent police eviction of sans papiers,
men, women and children, who had had taken refuge there. Police
forcibly entered two buildings this past Friday, one in the rue
de la Fraternité (XIX arrondissement) and the other in
rue de la Tombe-Issoire (XIV arrondissement).
News reports showed a building-vehicle bludgeoning open the
entrance of a block of flats. A man carrying a baby emerges. Then
some women exclaim: Its the beginning of school today.
Our children are due to go to school. You cant do this on
the first day back at school!
The 80 Africans evicted from the ironically named rue de
la Fraternité (Fraternity Street) decided to set up
camp in the Square de la Butte du Chapeau Rouge until the
promises of re-housing have been concretised. There, with
the help of the Red Cross, the district association, neighbours
and friends, 18 families are living in three large tents and have
access to water and toilets and, according to press agency releases,
adequate supplies of food
NDenin Coulibaly, one of the Fraternity Street evicted,
told the press: I am disgusted with Sarkozy. I found myself
yesterday sleeping in a park though I have a job and permits.
We were evicted on the first day of the school year. My son has
the right to go to school like everyone else.
Saturdays march assembled at the Quai de la Gare Metro
station by the Boulevard Vincent-Auriol and made for the Place
du Danube near the Fraternity Street groups camp. They marched
to the rhythm of several percussion groups, but the mood was serious,
thoughtful, quietly angry and determined. A young man held up
a handmade placard with photographs of president Chirac, Prime
Minister de Villepin and Sarkozy with the legend in black Fine
words. People burned. Dirty war against the poor and, in
red: Burned in 2005, and a list of childrens
names with their ages indicated.
In front of what remains of the Vincent-Auriol block of flats
there was a long line of flower-bunches. Messages on the metal
barrier the police had erected read: Our children sacrificed
to the god money and After the tragedy....they are
proposing the final solution: shutting down our shelters, deportation
to selection camps, expulsion.
These sentiments were also voiced by the demonstrators. Favourite
slogans were Solidarity with the mal-logés,
French, immigrants - solidarity, Government
murderers, Sarkozy murderer, Apply the requisition
law, Regularise the sans papiers.
Apart from residents of squats and substandard housing, there
were delegations on the demonstration from several NGOs (Catholic
Aid, Emmaüs), associations fighting for the right to be housed,
organisations opposing racial discrimination and for the sans
papiers (Droits Devant, SOS racisme etc), trade unions (the
FSU, CGT, SUD-Solidaires), political parties (Communist Party,
Greens, the Ligue Communiste Revolutionnaire, Lutte Ourvriere,
and some anarchist groups.) No Socialist Party contingent was
visible.
A government proposal to build 5,000 temporary residences was
condemned by Jean-Baptiste Eyraud of the DAL (Right to Housing):
Were asking the government to change its policies,
to forget the 5,000 shacks of shame whose construction the Prime
Minister has announced....What is needed today is a massive programme
of construction of social housing and, meanwhile, the requisitioning
of empty dwelling.
Neither the government nor the opposition Socialist Party have
shown the slightest interest in acting on such minimal demands.
Paris: 48 African immigrants die in
apartment block fires
[1 September 2005]
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