This item is available on the Militant Islam Monitor website, at http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/1214

Paris is burning: Islamofacists take up where Nazis left off - as the French Republic becomes the French Khalifate

Will the French feel 'provoked' enough by the Islamofacists to act against them - or just become post Vichy dhimmis ?
November 3, 2005

MIM: The book "Is Paris Burning?" detailed how Paris narrowly missed being reduced to rubble on the orders of Adolf Hitler -now the Islamofacists are finishing where the Nazis left off .



Vehicles have been set on fire in seven nights of unrest in Paris

A group of youths watch as firefighters extinguish burning vehicles during disturbances in the Paris suburb of Aulnay sur Bois. Photograph: Victor Tonelli/Reuters
A group of youths watch as firefighters extinguish burning vehicles during disturbances in the Paris suburb of Aulnay sur Bois. Photograph: Victor Tonelli/Reuters

"They have no work. They have nothing to do. Put yourself in their place," said Abderrahmane Bouhout, president of the Clichy-sous-Bois mosque..." http://lfpress.ca/newsstand/News/International/2005/11/03/1290567-sun.html

"...This problem is exploding in the face of the government," said Dominique Moisi, deputy director of the French Institute of International Relations. "They have politicized it so much they are making fools of themselves. There's the image of Paris burning and that is very, very bad..." http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2002600812_france03.html

MIM: The Muslims youth don't even pretend to have a pretext for the destruction for the government "to accept" they brazenly state that they are doing it for "thrills".

"...Ruling UMP MP Jacques Myard said the violence was a failure of the French model of integration, but that the government had been weak.

It had "accepted, step-by-step, that every night youths burn cars, destroy business and so on. Those guys will use the pretext of everything to riot, to demonstrate, to destroy", he said.

MIM: The French government has also "accepted" that they are the responsible for the Muslims who came here of their own volition, and should be posing the question to Muslim 'leaders' what they are doing living in country which they despise and are intent on destroying.

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MIM: The Muslim see the police as "provoking them" which begs the question as to when French who have had their businesses, cars, and schools destroyed will start to react to the Muslim 'provocations' or just behave like good dhimmis and continue where they left off in Vichy.

"We have found our thrills playing with riot police in the evening," one 22-year-old told the AFP news agency. "As long as the police come and provoke us in the evening, we'll bring out the Molotov cocktails, stones, petanque balls, planks," he said.

"People are fed up with being controlled by cops, being stopped over and over," said Jean-Jacques Eyquem, a 53-year-old taxi driver..."

"...The kids here have understood Nicolas Sarkozy's message as a declaration of war," said Mohammed Benali, 51, shaking his head at the burned-out carcass of a car. "He has provoked them, and his riot police with their rubber bullets and water cannon have provoked them, too..."

For their part Muslim leaders expect French politicians and the public to show more "dhimmitude" in the face of the Islamo facist onslaught implying that if they do Muslims may allow them to live in peace again if the infidels they agree to use their dhimmi taxes (Jizya) to meet their demands for new housing, schools, and mosques.

"...We must tell youths that France does not want to hold them down," says Rachid Hamoudi, director of the Lille mosque in northern France..."

"We must ensure that the community trusts its country, and vice-versa..."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4375910.stm

MIM: In the spirit of Vichy French president Chirac has made it clear to the Muslims that he will accede to their demands and won't come down too hard on them - since France has made them angry.

"Tempers need to cool," Chirac told ministers during a cabinet meeting on Wednesday. "We can't have a law-free zone in the Republic," he went on to say. "A lack of dialogue and an escalation of disrespectful behavior will lead to a dangerous situation."

MIM: The abject dhimmitude which has turned the French Republic into the French Khalifate and the lie that the riots were spawned by poverty and not Muslim rage at infidel society, can be seen by the fact that the French have appointed a Muslim Minister for Equal opportunities who, instead of trying to calm the situation by appealing to his fellow Muslims, has sided with the rioters and blamed the French government for "not doing enough" saying that they must "assimilate" (i.e.. defer) to the immigrants. He also mocked the disagreements between government ministers on how to handle the situation.Note that his bellicosity is described as "feisty".

"...Azouz Begag, the feisty Minister for Equal Opportunities and a native of the suburban housing projects, has advocated a different approach, blaming the outbreak of violence on a persistent sense of disenfranchisement in the slums that is aggravated by the failure of the state to include minorities in the security forces.

He has called for a full public debate on France's policies for assimilating immigrants and overcoming discrimination. "After all," he said recently, "it's not uninteresting to see that two ministers do not see the same France.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/TPStory/LAC/20051103/RIOTS03/TPInternational/TopStories

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See: "How Europe became Eurabia"

http://www.jihadwatch.org/dhimmiwatch/archives/002655.php

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A car showroom burns in Paris suburb, Aulnay-sous-Bois, early Thursday. (AP / Christophe Ena)

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The smoldering remains of a Renault car showroom (AP)

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Shots fired at Paris riot police
By Philippe Naughton and agencies
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,13509-1855955,00.html

Riot police battling to restore order in run-down immigrant suburbs around Paris came under gunfire last night during a seventh night of anti-government rioting.

Jean-Francois Cordet, the top official in the Seine-Saint-Denis region north of Paris, said today that four shots were fired at police and fire officers in four different towns, but without causing any injuries.

Despite the presence of a large force of armed riot police, nine people were lightly injured and more than 200 vehicles torched as youths continued their week-long rampage.

In one northeastern suburb, Aulnay-sous-Bois, a police station was briefly taken over and ransacked by youths while a gymnasium and a Renault garage were set ablaze and a shopping centre vandalised. South of Paris, in Antony, two firebombs were thrown at a police station.

The rioting has become a major headache for the French Government, highlighting the divisions and rivalries between its major figures. Both Dominique de Villepin, the Prime Minister, and Nicolas Sarkozy, the Interior Minister, have cancelled foreign trips to deal with the violence.

President Chirac yesterday appealed for calm, but he appeared to take a potshot at M Sarkozy, his political rival and future presidential candidate, when he said that an "escalation of disrespect" could make the situation worse.

Although the riots were set off by the accidental electrocution of two African teenagers who climbed into an electrical sub-station to escape a police identity check, the rioters say they are motivated by M Sarkozy's own "disrespect" - he has offended leftwingers and immigrant groups by promising to "hose down" immigrant estates and clean out the "scum".

All of the areas hit by the rioting have large ethnic minorities, mostly Muslims of North African origin, and are dominated by depressing public housing estates where crime is rife and gangs run rampant. In one suburb, a French television crew were forced by hooded youths to abandon their car, which was then set ablaze by a 40-strong mob.

M de Villepin held crisis talks on the unrest with a group of ministers and MPs from his centre-right UMP party this morning, with more talks scheduled later in the day. MPs said afterwards that the Government was united on how to tackle the unrest: by upholding the law but also by taking urgent steps to improve living conditions and social integration in these towns.

M de Villepin has said that he is counting on M Sarkozy - whose open ambition to run for president in 2007 had been boosted by a decline in crime and delinquency on his watch - to "take the necessary measures" on law-and-order.

In Clichy-sous-Bois, anger continued to run high over the death of the two youths, Bouna Traore, a 15-year-old of Malian background, and Zyed Benna, a 17-year-old of Tunisian origin, and over a police teargas grenade fired into a mosque during clashes on Sunday night.

The area was calmer last night than other neighbourhoods, but some youths said they planned to keep up their defiance. "We have found our thrills playing with riot police in the evening," one 22-year-old told the AFP news agency. "As long as the police come and provoke us in the evening, we'll bring out the Molotov cocktails, stones, petanque balls, planks," he said.

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French (Muslim) youth open fire on police

http://www.guardian.co.uk/france/story/0,11882,1608024,00.html

French youths fired at police and burned over 300 cars last night as towns around Paris experienced their worst night of violence in a week of urban unrest.

The French prime minister, Dominique de Villepin, was involved in a series of crisis meetings today following the clashes between police and immigrant groups in at least 10 poor suburbs, during which youths torched car dealerships, public buses and a school.

Four shots were fired at police and fire officers in four different towns without causing any injuries, said Jean-Francois Cordet, the senior government official for the troubled Seine-Saint-Denis region north of Paris, where the week of violence has been concentrated.

Protestors set fire to 315 cars in the Paris area overnight, half of them in Seine-Saint-Denis, where nine people were injured, officials said.

The violence has once more trained a spotlight on the poverty and lawlessness of France's rundown big-city suburbs and raises questions about an immigration policy that has, in effect, created sink ghettos for mainly African minorities who suffer from discrimination in housing, education and jobs.

In the north-eastern suburb of Aulnay-sous-Bois, gangs of youths set fire to a Renault car dealership and incinerated at least a dozen cars, a supermarket and a local gymnasium.

In nearby La Courneuve, two shots were fired at riot police, Mr Cordet said. A third shot targeted firefighters in Noisy-le-Sec, and a forth was aimed at a fire crew in Saint-Denis, home to the Stade de France stadium.

Bands of youths forced a team of France-2 television reporters out of their car in the suburb of Le Blanc Mesnil, then flipped the vehicle and set it on fire.

Unrest spilled over to public housing projects in the area, where police engaged in a cat-and-mouse game with youths, who would break car windows and toss petrol-bombs inside before running away.

Today, France's government was in crisis mode with Mr de Villepin calling a string of emergency meetings with government officials throughout the day.

One was a working lunch with the interior minister, Nicolas Sarkozy, who has been accused of inflaming the crisis with his tough talk and police tactics. Mr Sarkozy has called troublemakers "scum" and vowed to "clean out" troubled suburbs, language that some say further alienated their residents.

The unrest was triggered by last Thursday's accidental death in Clichy-sous-Bois, five miles from Aulnay, of two African teenagers who were electrocuted while hiding in a power substation from what they believed, apparently wrongly, was police pursuit. An interior ministry official described the clashes as "more like sporadic harassment, lightweight hit-and-run urban guerrilla fighting, than head-to-head confrontation". Small, highly mobile groups of up to a dozen youths emerge, hurl stones or petrol bombs, and disperse. "It's hard to contain," the official said.

The minister of social cohesion, Jean-Louis Borloo, said the government had to react "firmly" but added that France must also acknowledge its failure to deal with anger simmering in poor suburbs for decades.

"We cannot hide the truth: that for 30 years we have not done enough," he told France-2 television.

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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4404362.stm
French police sent to riot towns
Burned-out buses in Aulnay-sous-Bois, near Paris The unrest has been spreading
Riots in Paris
A thousand police officers are being deployed in the suburbs of Paris, after seven consecutive nights of rioting.

The officers will be stationed in Seine-Saint-Denis, north-east of Paris. Half of the department's 40 towns were affected by violence last night.

Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin has been holding emergency crisis talks, following criticism at his failure to end the violence.

So far, police on Thursday night have reported a small number of incidents.

In Seine-Saint-Denis, a number of cars were set alight, projectiles were thrown at police and fires were reported in two towns.

Map of main flashpoints

The unrest has also spread beyond the Paris region for the first time, with reports of cars on fire in the central town of Dijon.

The riots were triggered by the deaths last week of two teenagers of African origin.

Bouna Traore, aged 15, and Zyed Benna, 17, were accidentally electrocuted at an electricity sub-station in Clichy-sous-Bois. Local people say they were fleeing police, a claim the authorities deny.

A criminal investigation and an internal police inquiry have been opened.

'Troublemakers'

Mr de Villepin said restoring order was his "absolute priority".

In scenes of escalating unrest overnight on Wednesday, shots were fired at police and firefighters, while gangs besieged a police station, set fire to a car showroom and threw petrol bombs. At least 177 cars were also set alight.

On Thursday night, 1,000 police will be stationed near car showrooms, shopping centres and government buildings in Seine-Saint-Denis.

Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy in Clichy-sous-Bois
Deaths that set off unrest Send us your reaction
Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, who earlier met the dead teenagers' families, said the violence was "not spontaneous" but rather "well organised".

He said the government would not allow "troublemakers, a bunch of hoodlums, think they can do whatever they want".

On Thursday afternoon, Mr de Villepin held cross-party crisis talks with Mr Sarkozy, other ministers, MPs and mayors of the some of affected towns.

Mr de Villepin and Mr Sarkozy and are likely rivals for the presidency in 2007, and their different approaches to the rioting had split the cabinet.

Mr Sarkozy has caused controversy with his strong language, labelling the rioters as "scum" and saying many of the suburbs need "industrial cleaning". Mr de Villepin has preached a more conciliatory message, urging ministers not to "stigmatise" vast areas.

Alienation

Francois Masanet, secretary general of the French police union, described the situation as "dramatic", and warned that the violence could escalate.

The areas affected are poor, largely immigrant communities with high levels of unemployment.

Burned car in Clichy-sous-Bois Many youths in the suburbs feel alienated from French society

Minister for Social Cohesion Jean-Louis Borloo said the government had to react "firmly", but added that France must also acknowledge its failure to deal with anger simmering in poor suburbs for decades.

Ruling UMP MP Jacques Myard said the violence was a failure of the French model of integration, but that the government had been weak.

It had "accepted, step-by-step, that every night youths burn cars, destroy business and so on. Those guys will use the pretext of everything to riot, to demonstrate, to destroy", he said.

Muslim leaders have urged politicians to show respect for immigrant communities.

Dalil Boubakeur, the head of the Paris mosque and the president of the French Council for the Muslim Religion, said Muslim immigrants in the suburbs "must be given the conditions to live with dignity as human beings", not in "disgraceful squats".


This item is available on the Militant Islam Monitor website, at http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/1214