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France: drumhead tribunals and threats of police state repression
By Alex Lantier
30 November 2007
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The French governments response to three nights of anti-police
rioting in Pariss poorer north suburbs has been a ruthless
assault on local inhabitants and on democratic rights. With 1,000
policemen already deployed against rioters, President Nicolas
Sarkozy gave two bellicose speeches yesterdayone in front
of 2,000 massed policemen at the corporate La Défense district,
another on prime-time national televisionthreatening stiff
jail terms for rioters and promising massive equipment purchases
for police. At the same time, the courts are passing draconian
sentences in drumhead tribunals against youth picked up by police
on suburban streets, often on the flimsiest evidence.
The riots were sparked by the deaths of two youths in Villiers-le-Bel
Sunday afternoon, in a collision between their motorbike and a
police car. According to testimony of residents, the policemen
fled the scene, leaving the two youths to die. The General Inspectorate
of the National Police (IGPN) issued a report Monday largely clearing
the police of responsibility, but the report itself was found
to be in contradiction with a video of the accident and the accounts
given by Villiers-le-Bels inhabitants.
In Villiers-le-Bel and surrounding areas, still sectioned off
by police after a night without rioting, inhabitants expressed
their frustration. One of them told the daily Le Monde:
The police, this is all theater; theyre coming here
with weapons and ski masks. Le Monde carried disturbing
pictures of policemen, inexplicably dressed as civilians and wearing
ski masks, but carrying shotguns and assault rifles with infrared
sights, guarding intersections.
Police surveillance helicopters, flying low, shone powerful
headlights down on streets and buildings. One resident commented:
Youd think we were at war, theyre provoking
the youth. Another yelled, Hey, you, extra-terrestrials!
at the circling helicopters.
Prime Minister François Fillon confirmed that the purpose
of the deployment was to intimidate the population: The
situation is much more calm than the two previous nights, but
all that remains, we well know, very fragile and we need a major
dissuasive force in the area to prevent what happened the previous
night from re-occurring.
The identity of the youths dragged off the streets and given
summary judgments in French courts confirms that what is taking
place is not a crackdown on violent gangs, but the terrorizing
of working-class youth from oppressed layers of the population.
Thirty-nine youths are still being watched by police, according
to the daily Libération, and eight have been judged
so far.
Cédric is a part-time plumber finishing vocational school,
with no police record. Accused of throwing Molotov cocktails at
police, he said he panicked when he was caught in
a volley of tear-gas grenades while walking home from his 20th
birthday party and tried to escape by scaling a barricade. Prosecutors
demanded that he be sentenced to 30 months in jail, causing stupor
in the courtroom, according to press accounts. Cédrics
lawyer responded by pleading that the judge only consider
the actual contents of the case against her client. Cédric
received a one-year prison sentence without parole.
Two teenagers, Jean-Matthieu and Alan, one on a short-term
contract as a shipping package preparer and another a part-time
warehouse stocker, received three-month prison terms without parole
for being found with packs of candy they said they found on the
street. They were taken directly to prison from the arms of their
parents. Neither one had a police record.
Noël, a 21-year old part-time security guard, was the
only youth tried yesterday with a police recordfor driving
last year without proper auto insurance. The police accused him
of torching cars with gasoline and busying himself with
the burning cars. The prosecutor announced, The facts
are clear, adding that unless you subscribe to a massive
conspiracy theory, there is no reason to doubt [police] accounts.
Noëls lawyer pointed out that a burning car gives off
powerful smells that get into your hair, your clothes,
whereas his client bore no such traces. Noël was the only
accused youth to be released.
As one defense lawyer, Laurence Benitez de Lugo, told Le
Monde: There is a desire for a firm, immediate response
which is not arrived at serenely. To speak more plainly,
the French courts are carrying out politically-motivated show
trials in a blatant assault on the democratic rights of the accused
and, by extension, of the entire French population.
Sarkozy and his officials are deliberately stoking panic by
slandering the inhabitants of Villiers-le-Bel, distorting the
seriousness of the riots, and calling for drastic increases in
police powers and equipment.
In an address to the nation on TF1 televisions prime-time
8 p.m. news bulletin, Sarkozy provocatively denied that there
was any social crisis in the suburbs and claimed that
recent events were the result of hoodlum-ocracy. He
said that youth opposing police in Villiers-le-Bel were drug
traffickers.
Sarkozy delivered similar comments in somewhat expanded form
before an assembly of 2,000 policemen at La Défense in
the west Paris suburbs. He said, The right response to the
riots is not more money on the taxpayers tab. The right
response is to arrest the rioters. Stressing that there
was no social crisis in the suburbs, he demagogically attacked
those who would lecture us about social issues but
dont know what its like to be in uniform, facing
rabid gangs.
One can appreciate the level of shamelessness in Sarkozys
comments by noting that, as of April 2007, his presidential campaign
was on the record as supporting a new Marshall Plan
for the poorer suburbs, a reference to the US financial assistance
that helped rebuild Western European capitalism after World War
II. Of course, being committed to budgetary austerity and appealing
to the anti-immigrant vote, Sarkozy never seriously intended to
carry out such a plan. However, the denial of elementary realitythat
the poorer, immigrant suburbs in France house the most oppressed
layers of the working class and face a massive social crisisis
a qualitatively new element of French politics.
Despite having recently succeeded in using the trade union
bureaucracy to end a strike by rail and energy workers against
pension cuts, Sarkozys regime faces a deteriorating political
situation. According to a recent poll carried out by Sofrès
for the conservative daily Le Figaro, Sarkozys approval
rating has recently dipped below 50 percent for the first time
in his presidency. The approval rating for his prime minister,
François Fillon, has fallen to 44 percent.
Ruling circles are highly conscious of the fact that public
sector resentment over salary and pension cuts extends to within
the police force, and particularly the gendarmerie military
policewho are responsible for policing rural areas, state
security, and military police duties in foreign interventions
of the French armed forces. As members of the military, the gendarmes
are denied union representation. However, several detachments
of gendarmes participated in the November strikes against pension
cuts. They also resent the fact that the police are substantially
better paid.
In his speech at La Défense, Sarkozy promised to convene
a joint working group to study how to erase
the distinctions between police and gendarmes. However,
his main method for appealing to the police forces was the promotion
of hostility towards the suburbs and stoking an atmosphere of
civil war.
Referring to the fact that several policemen were hit with
pellets fired from hunting rifles belonging to unknown persons
during the Villiers-le-Bel riots, Sarkozy promised the policemen
that those who have taken the responsibility of firing on
public officials will find themselves before the AssizesFrances
criminal courts.
He then called for a massive increase in the use of video-surveillance
cameras, high-range flash-ball guns, and Taser electric guns.
Making it sound as if every high-rise residential complex was
firing on police, he added that surveillance helicopters would
have been invaluable in finding stocks of weapons on the
roofs of apartment complexes, and called for the purchase
of more such helicopters.
There is a definite political logic to such inflammatory language.
As far as Sarkozys patrons in French business circles are
concerned, his task is to eliminate the social concessions granted
to the French working class, which are hurting the competitiveness
of French business and which his predecessors over the last decade
tried but failed to fully dismantle. They are fully conscious
of the powerful social tensions that such a policy will release.
Thus, shortly after Sarkozys election, economist Nicolas
Baverez wrote in the right-wing Revue des Deux Mondes:
The 2007 election [won by Sarkozy] is the last opportunity,
the last chance to modernize our country without a civil war.
The governments handling of the Villiers-le-Bel crisis
should be taken as a signal that, in the face of growing political
opposition to Sarkozys rule, the French ruling elite is
increasingly considering the option of civil war against the population.
See Also:
Massive police deployment in Villiers-le-Bel
France: Three nights of rioting in response to youths' deaths
[29 November 2007]
France: Riots break out in Paris suburbs
after police crash kills youth
[27 November 2007]
French railway strike betrayed
[24 November 2007]
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