Проблема е че тва се прехвърля в цяла Европа и става масово. Има много въпроси - Кой има интерес от това например и дали това е бунт срещу сегашната власт или е инсцинирано нарочно от нея да всява страх или истината е по средата и всеки се възползва от ситуацията.
Горят църкви във Франция! Палежи в Брюксел и Берлин
07 ноември 2005 / News.dir.bg
Мен малко в тоя случай ме дразни това че ...
нямам време да преведа тази статия, но тя може да послужи за доказталеstvo, за опасността на ситуацията...
Europe worried as French riots spread
//Source:
http://euobserver.com/?aid=20277&rk=1//Elica Vucheva

08.11.2005 - 17:46 CET | By Elitsa Vucheva EUOBSERVER / LYON – As urban riots are spreading all over France and gaining momentum, Europen leaders are becoming increasingly concerned that France's woes may spread, particularly to neighbouring countries with large immigrant populations.
Cars were torched in Germany (Berlin and Bremen) and Belgium (Brussels and Liege) on Sunday and Monday, but the events were qualified by Belgian police as "local" and "isolated" ones and no open confrontations took place. Belgian authorities, however, said they would follow the situation closely.
In Italy, it is just "a matter of time" that the problems occur, as the country "has the worst suburbs in Europe", Italian opposition leader and former Commission president Romano Prodi said, according to Liberation.
The British along with the Russian, American, Japanese and Australian governments, have already warned their nationals to be careful and avoid the French suburbs, the French paper wrote on Monday.
All this is worsening France’s image abroad, the French press comments, adding that Paris usually attracts more than 35 million tourists every year.
How it all started
The riots started after a controversial incident on 27 October, when two teenagers died while fleeing an identity check by the police. The police, however, denied having chased them.
Resentment reached new heights after interior minister Nicolas Sarkozy said that the French suburbs needed deep and tough cleansing from all "the scum".
As a result, the media showed youngsters dubbing Mr Sarkozy "a fascist" and calling his comments purely provocative.
The riots, which have spread to cities such as Lyon, Strasbourg, Toulouse, Lille, Bordeaux and Nantes, appear to have much deeper roots however.
"Discrimination clearly exists"
"I am absolutely not surprised by all this, given the situation of the people living in the cités", a French psychologist working with young people from Lyon’s suburbs told the EUobserver.
"They are living in precarious conditions, unemployed, excluded. They can neither get a good job, nor leave the suburbs, because to leave, you have to have money, but most of all, you have to have a face corresponding to the norms and expectations. Discrimination clearly exists and people know it", she explained, calling the events "an expected rage against social injustice".
"It is not by insulting these people calling them 'scum' that things will be arranged. The social system of the suburbs is very complex, trying to extract a few delinquents is far from enough," she added.
This way of thinking seems to be confirmed by some of the young suburb inhabitants’ comments.
"I have had this card for 20 years now, and I’m fed up with being refused jobs just because of my name", a young man of Arab origin brandishing a French identity card was shown saying on national television.
"Firm and fair"
Meanwhile, both the interior minister Nicolas Sarkozy and prime minister Dominique de Villepin called for calm, while insisting the government would continue being "firm and fair".
More than 1,200 people have been arrested during the 12 days of rioting, and last night alone, more than 1,400 vehicles were torched all over the country.
Mr de Villepin on Monday announced that the number of police forces sent to the suburbs would be increased, reaching 9,500 men, while an extraordinary council of ministers this morning reactivated a 1955 emergency law giving curfew powers for regional authorities.
It also gave the police the right to carry out raids where they suspect weapons, or any dangerous substances, are stored.